kids'
The possessive form for the noun kid is kid's.
The possessive form for the singular noun kid is kid's.
It is grammatically wrong to spell his like what you have done. The correct question should be written like this: "What is his kid's name?" or "What is the name of his kid?" ; here both questions are correct and you can use either. and you can either write "what is" as a long form" or "what's as a short form", and the "s" in kid's name is different than the " s" in "what's". The "s" in "kid's name" is possessive "s" or you can call it genitive. It shows the the noun that comes after the "s" belongs to the noun that comes before the "s".
That is the correct spelling of "because" (giving a cause or reason)A kid's mnemonic is:Big Elephants Can Always Understand Small Elephants
He or she should be old enough to know that "sine" is the wrong spelling for what the question is about. Do you know what the spelling for the correct word is?
The possessive form is 'Captain Kid's treasure', which can be a the subject of a sentence or clause, or the object of a verb or a preposition. Example:Subject: Captain Kid's treasure was never found.Object of the verb: I will find Captain Kid's treasure.Object of the preposition: I will find the gold of Captain Kid's treasure.
The noun kid forms the possessive by adding an apostrophe and an 's': kid's. For example 'I think you should put the kid's blanket on it tonight, it's cold in the goats' shed.'
The possessive form of "kid" is "kid's," so the apostrophe goes before the s. For example, "the kid's toy."
The reversed spelling of "little kid" is "dik elttil."
Tosh-0 - 2009 Spelling Bee Kid 4-14 was released on: USA: 19 June 2012
no kid for Oprah sorry!
The correct answer (as of 2009) is no.