Yes, they can; for example:
The boys ran for the school bus. (plural noun, boys)
The boy's parents bought him a bicycle. (singular possessive noun, boy's; plural noun parents)
Both boys' bicycles were blue. (plural possessive noun, boys'; plural noun, bicycles)
Yes, plural and possessive nouns can be used in one sentence. For example, "The dogs' toys were scattered all over the yard."
No, not all words have a distinct plural possessive form. Some singular possessive forms can be used to indicate possession for both singular and plural nouns. For example, "children's" can be used for the plural possessive of "child" and "children."
No, "mes" is singular. In French, "mes" is used to indicate possession for singular nouns. For plural possessive, you would use "mes" for plural nouns.
A possessive noun shows ownership or relationship. For example, "Jane's book" indicates that the book belongs to Jane. To use possessive nouns in a sentence, simply add an apostrophe and an "s" after the noun or just an apostrophe after plural nouns.
Plural possessive forms are used to show that more than one person or thing owns or is associated with something. For regular plural nouns, you add an apostrophe after the s (e.g., students' books). For irregular plural nouns that do not end in s, you add 's (e.g., children's toys).
The possessive adjective form of pronoun 'its' is singular, describing a noun that belongs to one thing. The plural form is 'their', describing a noun as belonging to more than one person or thing.
Deer's
Congressman's
To correct the plural possessive nouns, an apostrophe must be added to the ending -s of committees (committees') and residents (residents').The plural, possessive noun faculties' is the correct form.A comma should be placed after the first two of the three plural possessive nouns.Also, the possessive adjective your is extraneous; the article the is the modifier used for all three of the plural possessive nouns.The correct sentence is, "Thank you so much again for all of the committees', the faculties', and the residents' consideration."If the possessive adjective your is used, the article the should not be used before each of the plural possessive nouns. The sentence would read, "Thank you so much again for all of your committees', faculties', and residents' consideration."
The apostrophe is used for possessive nouns and for contractions. In some rare cases, such as letters and numbers, an apostrophe is used with S to create a plural noun.
possessive pronoun is my,our,yours,his,her,its,theirsare used before the nouns their modify. mine,ous,yours,his,hers,its,theirs are used after the nouns..
The nominative pronoun is we, and the objective pronoun is us. (first person plural)The possessive adjective (used with nouns) is our.The possessive pronoun (used alone) is ours.
All nouns used to show possession use an apostrophe.Singular possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of a noun.For plural nouns that end in -s, the possessive are formed by adding an apostrophe after the existing -s ('); for irregular plural nouns that don't end with -s, the possessive is formed by adding the apostrophe s ('s), the same as a singular noun.
An apostrophe at the end of a word usually indicates that letters have been omitted to indicate a contraction, such as "can't" for "cannot" or "won't" for "will not." It can also indicate possession when used before the letter "s", such as "Sarah's book."
The plural form of the noun wool is wools.The possessive form of the of the plural noun wools is wools'.example: The wools' prices have gone up, but the cottons are the same.Note: The plural forms of the uncountable nouns 'wool' and 'cotton' are used for 'types of' or 'kinds of'.
The word "comedians" is a plural noun -- it appears an apostrophe was omitted. The spellings that are used with other nouns are possessive nouns, not adjectives, although they perform a similar function.The spelling comedian's is the singular possessive noun (of or about one comedian).The spelling comedians' is the plural possessive noun (of or about more than one comedian).
Possessive nouns show ownership or relationship, indicating that something belongs to someone or something else (e.g. the dog's bone, Sarah's car). Possessive pronouns are used to replace a noun and show possession without using the noun itself (e.g. mine, yours, his, hers).
The plural possessive is, used in context: "The infants'cries were heard."