The walkers had wandered into the deers' feeding ground.
Some trees in the deers' forest were being cut so they moved to another part of it.
The possessive noun in the sentence is in the incorrect form.The correct possessive form for 'the toy of the dog' is 'the dog's toy'.
The possessive form for the noun dog is dog's.Example sentence: The dog's collar has the dog's name in rhinestones.
The plural is monkeys. The monkeys were kept in cages. The plural possessive is monkeys'. The monkeys' cages were dirty.
Example sentence: The elephant's tusks and ears were large.
Some trees in the deers' forest were being cut so they moved to another part of it.
When I went to the forest I saw a deer.
No, "she will never agree to that" does not use a possessive pronoun. The pronoun "she" is a subject pronoun in this sentence. Possessive pronouns show ownership or relationship, such as "her" or "hers."
The correct possessive form is: The bus's diesel fuel...
To use the plural possessive, change the sentence to:Each day the groups' scores improved.
The teenager's mother was so possessive of her that she never let her go out with her friends on the weekends."A possessive apostrophe shows ownership of an object"Possessive means to own so the president's birthday has a possessive apostrophe before the s as it is the president's birthday day. (u can use the first sentence or make up your own.
The possessive form of the noun sentence is sentence's.Example: You can edit the sentence's length.The pronoun that that takes the place of the noun sentence is it.The possessive form (a possessive adjective) is its.Example: The sentence is too long. You can edit its length.
it's a myth actually. You can use it in sentence.
If you are talking about the tooth of Fang or fangs that are teeth,then it would be Fang Teeth.
Only managers can use the company's cars.
When using it as a possessive. EX: I used their truck to move my couch.
The word "its" does not require an apostrophe when used as a possessive pronoun. Only use "its' " when it is a contraction for "it is" or "it has," and never as a possessive form.