lady's
The possessive form for the noun lady is lady's.
The possessive form of the singular noun lady is lady's.Example: What is the lady's name?
The correct possessive form is: ladies' clubThe noun ladies' is the plural possessive form.Can one lady form a club? The singular possessive form is lady's club.
The plural form of the noun lady is ladies.The plural possessive form is ladies'.example: We're planning a ladies' night out.
The possessive form for lady (singular) is lady's. The possessive form for ladies (plural) is ladies'.
Ladies' handbags are on sale.
The noun spectacles is an uncountable noun with no singular form. The noun spectacles is a shortened form for a pair of spectacles. The plural form is two pairs of spectacles.The plural form for the noun phrase young lady is young ladies. The singular possessive form is young lady's; the plural possessive form is young ladies'.Example singular possessive: The young lady's spectacleswere left in the library.Example plural possessive: Two young ladies' spectacleswere left in the library.
The plural form of the noun lady is ladies.The plural possessive form is ladies'.Example: Someone left their phone in the ladies' locker room.
The ladie's club is not a correct possessive form.The noun ladies is the plural noun.The possessive form of the plural noun is ladies'.The correct plural possessive form is the ladies' club.The noun lady is the singular noun.The correct singular possessive form is a lady's club(a golf club intended for a female).
The noun lady's is the possessive form of the singular noun lady.The apostrophe s means that something belongs to a lady.
Plural: LadiesBelonging: Lady'sYour question does not make it clear what you are talking about, but either way, the answer is No.If you're talking about the plural form of "lady", it's "ladies".If you're talking about the possessive form of "lady", it's "lady's"If you're talking about the possessive form of the plural "ladies", it's "ladies'"The only way that "Ladie's" is correct is if "Ladie" is a proper name (possibly for your dog), in which case "Ladie's" would be the possessive form of your dog's name.
The plural form of the compound noun 'lady in waiting' is ladies in waiting.The plural possessive form is ladies in waiting's.Example: The ladies in waiting's duties include managing the correspondence of the mistress.