The noun 'student' is the singular form (one student).
The noun 'students' is the plural form (two or more students).
Examples:
I've reserved this book for a student.
These seats are reserved for students.
it would be student's because students implies more than one student and if you are talking about more than one student's mother it would be the students' mothers
Neither is correct. You would say "There are no students" or "There is not one student" or "There are not any students."
The word students is a plural noun. It is the singular of student.
An apostrophe indicates possession or attribute (something about a noun).The singular is student's -- belonging to a student (e.g. the student's locker).The plural is students' -- belonging to more than one (e.g. the students' lockers).
No, it's a noun. An adjective is a describing word. For example: In the sentence "The students are noisy." Students is the noun and noisy is the adjective.
students work = The students work hard. (multiple students) student's work = The student's work deserved an A. (one student) students' work = The students' work was the highlight of the presentation. (belonging to multiple students)
it would be student's because students implies more than one student and if you are talking about more than one student's mother it would be the students' mothers
Student Advisors are assigned to students based on the students field of study?
The plural is students. Apostrophes are almost never used to form plurals.The possessive for one student is student's and the possessive for a bunch of students would be students' (only the apostrophe).Examples:There are several students.One student's bike is missing.All of the students' bikes are parked in the same place.
“What is the student enrollment (in the total number of students)?”
Teachers vs Students Student vs Student Student vs Students Student vs himself Student vs the whole school.
The possessive noun for a desk belonging to one student is "student's desk." If the desk belongs to multiple students, it would be "students' desk." The term "students desk" without an apostrophe implies a desk for students in general rather than a specific student or group of students.
Neither is correct. You would say "There are no students" or "There is not one student" or "There are not any students."
The word students is a plural noun. It is the singular of student.
Yes.If the "needs" refers to one student then it is -> student's needsIf the "needs" refers to many students then it is -> students' needs
To show that the word posses one thing as a plural noun: Students': Means several students share something Student's: Means one student owns something Hope that helps! <a href="http://www.thebigchoice.com">The Big Choice</a>
If something belongs to one student, write "student's." If something belongs to multiple students, write "students'."