A plural noun is a word for two or more people, places, or things.
Examples:
one apple, two apples
one boss, two bosses
one child, two children
one door, two doors.
A possessive noun is a word that shows something in the sentence belongs to that noun. The possessive form is indicated by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the noun, or just an apostrophe (') to the end of plural nouns that already end with s.
Examples:
one apple's price; two apples' price
one boss's office; two bosses' offices
one child's bicycle; two children's bicycles
one door's handle; two doors' handles
A plural noun is a noun that refers to more than one person, place, thing, or idea (e.g., dogs, books). A possessive noun shows ownership or relationship and is formed by adding an apostrophe and an "s" ('s) to the noun (e.g., John's car, the dog's toy).
A plural noun is a word for more than one of a person, place, thing or idea. The most common way to show that a noun is plural is to add an 's' or 'es' to the end of the word. Examples:
one teacher or two teachers
one country or three countries
one child or four children
one question or many questions
A possessive noun is a noun that shows that something belongs to it. The most common way a noun shows possession is to add an apostrophe 's' to the end of the noun. Examples:
The teacher's desk
The country's flag
The child's face
The question's answer
A plural possessive noun is a plural noun that shows that something belongs to it. A plural noun that ends with -s show possession by adding an apostrophe after the ending -s. A plural noun that does not end with -s shows possession by adding an apostrophe -s to the end of the word. Examples:
a teachers' conference
the countries' agreement
the children's playground
all of the questions' answers
The possessive form for the plural noun wives is wives'.
The plural possessive form of the noun "buzz" is "buzzes'".
The plural possessive noun for "vowel" is "vowels'".
The plural possessive noun for "sisters" is "sisters'".
The noun "branch" is a regular plural noun, a noun that forms its plural by adding "s" or "es". The plural form of branch is "branches".The plural possessive form is branches', a regular plural possessive.
The plural possessive noun of molecules is molecules' .
The noun skies is the plural form of the noun sky.The possessive forms are:sky's (singular possessive)skies' (plural possessive)
The plural form for the noun tree is trees.The plural possessive form is trees'.
The possessive form for the plural noun wives is wives'.
The plural possessive noun is racers'.
The noun "branch" is a regular plural noun, a noun that forms its plural by adding "s" or "es". The plural form of branch is "branches".The plural possessive form is branches', a regular plural possessive.
The plural possessive form of "colonists" is "colonists'."
To change a singular possessive noun to a plural possessive noun, first you must change the noun from a singular noun to a plural noun. The reason for this is that plural nouns can take different forms which will determine how the plural possessive is formed. Examples:A plural noun that ends with the letter s, just add an apostrophe after the ending s (s').singular noun, boy; plural noun, boys; plural possessive boys'An irregular plural noun that does not end with s, add anapostrophes ('s) to the end of the word.singular noun, child; plural noun, children; plural possessive children's
The plural form for the noun leader is leaders. The plural possessive form is leaders'.
The plural possessive form of the noun "buzz" is "buzzes'".
The plural form for the noun gentleman is gentlemen.The plural possessive form is gentlemen's.
The plural form of the noun highway is highways.the plural possessive form is highways'.