The possessive form of the plural noun cats is cats'.
Example: Are those your cats' toys?
The possessive form of the plural noun cats is cats'.The possessive noun phrase is: the cats' collars
singular: cat plural: cats plural possessive: cats'
The possessive form of the plural noun cats is cats'. The possessive form is pronounced the same as the plural form (katz not katz-es). The use of the noun is what changes; for example: Both of the cats like to sit in the sun. (plural) The cats' names are Hansel and Gretel. (plural possessive; the names of the cats)
The possessive form of the plural noun cats is cats'.Example: The cats' names are Mack and Mavis.
The apostrophe is used to identify possessive nouns as separate from plural nouns, for example, the possessive boss's and the plural bosses (both are pronounced the same).Examples:A cat chased a dog into the woods. (singular, one cat)The cat's owner chased a dog into the woods. (singular possessive, the owner of one cat)Two cats chased a dog into the woods. (plural, two cats)The two cats' owner chased a dog into the woods. (plural possessive, the owner of the two cats)Note: There is no apostrophe in the possessive pronouns his, hers and its, ours, yours and theirs.
The plural form of the noun cat is cats.The plural possessive form is cats' (add an apostrophe to the end of a plural noun ending in s).Example: The cats' names are Solomon and Sheba.
Same as yours.
Look at those cats. Those modifies cats. What kind of cats? Those cats.
No, the possessive noun cat's is the singular possessive form.The plural form for the noun cat is cats.The plural possessive form is cats'.Examples:This is the cat's water bowl. (singular)All of the cats' water bowls must be washed daily. (plural)
No, the possessive (with the apostrophe) is used with "cats", since they possess the tails. The sentence should be, "I pulled two cats' tails."
put just an apostrophe like cats' or sheep's
They have an apostrophe: Taylor's jeans are torn. The cats' scratching post is worn out