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Apostrophes are use to indicate possession. For example, in the sentence 'That is Jack's cookie', there is an apostrophe and an S at the end of the possessive noun, in this case, the name 'Jack', to indicate possession of (alternatively, you could say he is the owner of) the following noun, in this case, the cookie.
Apostrophes can also be used in contraction, replacing whatever was removed. 'He's', for example, is a contraction of 'he is', replacing the I with an apostrophe;.
Be careful about the pronoun 'it', though, wherein an apostrophe is only applied when indicating contraction, and not possession, where instead it is simply 'its'.
I hope this comment's length, and any implications about your grammar skills that may end up forming due to this comment (of which I do not intend; I mean no harm from this) do not bother, irritate or otherwise offend you.
Just a recommendation.