An apostrophe is a mark of punctuation that can denote missing letters (can’t), plurals (3’s), or possessive case (Georgia’s) depending on how it is used. The curly apostrophe is a specific glyph used in typeset text and other instances where appearances and good typographical practices matter. Although its appearance varies from one typeface to another, in general the curly apostrophe is usually a small curved mark that faces to the left (like a tiny 9). It looks like a comma except it sits up above the baseline. In some fonts the curly apostrophe may not look substantially different than the straight version.
- On a Mac, use
Shift+Option+]for a curly apostrophe. For Windows, useALT 0146(hold down the ALT key and type the numbers on the numeric keypad). - In HTML, code the character as
’for ’


