The possessive form is Palton's puppy.
"Their" is a possessive adjective (also known as a possessive pronoun or possessive pronominal adjective) showing possession by "they". "He took the package to their house." "Mr. and Mrs. DeHart took their cocker spaniel puppy to the veterinarian for his shots." It can be confused with the homonym "there", which is most often used as an adverb ("David wants to go there") or a noun ("He arrived there for breakfast"). Other possessive adjectives are my (belonging to me), your (belonging to you), his or her (belonging to him or her), and our (belonging to us).
The sentence would be, "This is Scott's video game."
Possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe. The possessive form for the personal pronoun it is its.The pronoun their is not a possessive pronoun; the pronoun their is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to them. The third person plural possessive pronoun is theirs, a word that takes the place of a noun belonging to them.Answer:If you are referring to a company as a thing, then the appropriate possessive adjective is its; for example:This is the company I work for and this is itslogo.If you are referring to a company as a group of people, then the appropriate possessive adjective is their; for example:This company make a quality product so look for their logo.
The sentence would be, "This is Scott's new electronic game."
Brother's is the possessive of the noun brother; the 's indicates something belonging to a brother. Example sentence:My brother's wife is my good friend.
Using possessive pronouns in writing helps to show ownership or belonging, while reflexive pronouns indicate that the subject of the sentence is also the object. This can make writing clearer and more precise, enhancing the overall quality of the text.
Apostrophes are used to indicate possession: E.g. 'The dog's bone' = 'the bone which belongs to the dog'(except in his, hers, ours, yours (but including one's))Apostrophes are also used to show a contraction:E.g. 'I will not' = 'I won't''You have not' = 'you haven't''They would have' = 'they would've'(careful now it's = 'it is' or 'it has' whereas its= 'belonging to it' because 'its' is like 'his')Apostrophes are never used to make pluralssingular: Flowerplural: flowers (more than one flower)possessive: flower's (belonging to a flower)plural possessive: flowers' (belonging to multiple flowers)
The plural form of the proper noun Virginia is Virginias.The plural possessive form is Virginias'.Example: The Virginias' last names are Dickens and Clemens.
Remember that apostrophes are used to make a word possessive, not a plural. "Mother's" would mean "belonging to Mother".
The noun days is the plural form of the singular noun day.The possessive form of the singular noun is day's (a day's work).The possessive form of the plural noun is days' (two days' work).
Puppy.
no u look up how to make puppy chow for puppies or how to make puppy chow for dogs why would you make it with life?