Just add an apostrophe, like this: "The people to listed all of Jesus' desciples."
To form the possessive plural of a surname ending in s, add only an apostrophe after the s. For example, the possessive plural of the Smiths would be the Smiths'.
To form the plural possessive of a word, you generally add an apostrophe after the "s" if the plural form ends in "s," or add 's if the plural form does not end in "s." For example, "students'" and "women's" are correct plural possessive spellings.
The plural form of the noun river is rivers.The plural possessive form is rivers'.Example: The Monongahela and Allegheny Rivers' confluence forms the Ohio River.
The plural form for the noun sheep is sheep; the possessive form for both the singular and the plural is sheep's.Examples:The sheep's owner sold it for a good price. (singular)The sheep's owner sold them for a good price. (plural)
The plural of a letter can be written using an apostrophe, which is usually not a valid way to form a plural. The plural spelling S's could also be a possessive, but Ss would probably be unclear. The phonetic version is esses, which is the plural of ess.
The plural of loaf is loaves. Some, but not all words ending in F change it to a V and add -es to form the plural (thief-thieves, hoof-hooves).
The plural possessive is others'. You simply add an apostrophe to a plural ending in 's' to make it possessive.
The usual spelling of the English surname is Humphries.The spelling of the plural noun for the surname Humphreyis Humphreys, and the possessive is Humphrey's or the HUmphreys'.
Yes. The plural form of a word or surname ending in S or SS uses the form -ES.
The plural form of the name "Windish" is "Windishes."
Proper nouns use apsotrophe S for the singular possessives, e.g. Joanne's.
The possessive form of the plural noun dependents is dependents'.
The plural possessive for the noun dish is dishes'.
The plural is composers and the plural possessive form is composers' (just an apostrophe added).
It depends on whether you are forming a possessive or a plural.The spelling boy's is a singular possessive, e.g. one boy's book.The spelling boys is plural, as in several boys.The spelling boys' (ending apostrophe) is a plural possessive, as in the boys' bikes.
The plural of the surname Sarli would be Sarlis.
soldiers - plural, soldier's - possessive
The possessive form of "libraries" is "libraries'".