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Plural possessive nouns are two or more people, places, or things that show ownership
There are two nouns. The nouns are cat and claws. Sarah's is a proper noun in the possessive case, which acts as an adjective.
The nouns in the sentence are:mother's (possessive form, modifies 'business')business (subject of the sentence)two (attributive, modifies 'week')week (attributive, modifies 'vacation')vacation (object of the preposition 'on')
The two nouns, 'nouns' and 'sentence' are placed correctly in your sentence.
You have no parentheses, but the sentence does have two plural nouns.The plural possessive forms for those nouns are:paths; paths'circles; circles'
The two nouns in your sentence are words and nouns, they are plural, common nouns.
A singular noun is a word for one person, place, or thing.A singular possessive noun is a noun that shows something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A plural noun is a word for two or more people, places, or things.A plural possessive noun is a noun that show something in the sentence belongs to that noun.EXAMPLESsingular: applesingular possessive: apple'splural: applesplural possessive: apples'singular: One apple's skin is gashed.plural: These apples' prices are very good.
There are two nouns in the sentence, they are flower and fragrance.
There are two nouns in the sentence: Katie and book.
There are two nouns in the sentence: 'accident' and 'morning'.
The pronoun in the sentence is their, a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to people or things.In the case of the example sentence, the pronoun 'their' takes the place of a plural noun, or two or more nouns for a previously mentioned group of people or the people of a given place.
A singular possessive noun shows that something in the sentence belongs to one person or thing. Add 's to the end of the noun to show possession. A plural possessive noun shows that something in the sentence belongs to two or more people or things. Add just an apostrophe to the end of plural nouns that already end in s, or 's to the end of plural nouns that do not end in s. Examples: My mother's car is new. The dogs' names are Rex and Spot. The store's hours are posted at the door. The man's shoes needed polishing. The men's suits are on the third floor.