The singular form of the plural noun geese is goose.
The singular possessive form is goose's.
example: The boy found a goose's feather and stuck it on his hat.
The singular noun is goose.The singular possessive form is goose's.The plural noun is geese.The plural possessive form is geese's.
The singular form of the plural noun 'geese' is goose.The singular possessive form is goose's.
Yes, the word geese's is the plural possessive form of the singular noun goose.Example: The geese's formation is a letter V.
No, the noun geese is the plural form of the singular noun goose.The plural possessive noun is geese's.A possessive noun indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A noun that does not end with an s forms its possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.A plural noun that does end with s forms its possessive by just adding an apostrophe (') to the end of the word.Example sentences:A lone goose glided on the pond. (singular)The boy stuck a goose's feather in his hat. (singular possessive)A flock of geese flew overhead. (plural)The geese's formation was a classic V. (plural possessive)
Goose is singular - one goose. Geese is the plural form - three geese.
The singular possessive form for the noun goose is goose's.Example: Jack stuck the goose's feather in his hat.
The plural of porch is porches.
The possessive form for the feathers of the geese is the geese's feathers.
The singular, possessive noun is Jewess's. Example: The scholarship is an anonymous Jewess's contribution.
"Firefly's" is a singular possessive noun.
The singular possessive noun is stepchild's.
No, "tomb" is a singular common noun, not a possessive noun.