The possessive form of the proper noun Lucky is Lucky's.
Example: Lucky's collar has his name on it.
mother's name is the correct possessive form
Lomaxes is the plural form. Lomax's is the singular possessive. Lomaxes' is the plural possessive.
The possessive form of daughter-in-law is daughter-in-law's.Example: My daughter-in-law's name is Margaret.
The possessive form for the name D.J. is D.J.'sor DJ's. Some people write this name as "Deejay," and the possessive would be "Deejay's."Also, you can always spell the word out: d.j. is the abbreviation of "disc jockey," and the possessive is "disc jockey's." The disc jockey's name is Robin. The d.j.'s name is Robin.
The possessive form for the name Adams is Adams'.
The possessive form of "it" is "its". (There is no plural form.) No possessive pronouns take an apostrophe: his, hers, ours, yours, its, theirs. "The dog is yours. Its name is Ben." Don't confuse "its" with "it's", which means "it is" or "it has". It is wrong to write "The dog is your's. It's name is Ben." Neither of the apostrophes should be there.
The possessive form of the proper noun Henry is Henry's.Example: Henry's party is this Saturday.
The possessive form is Lois's.This is Lois's birthday.
The possessive form of the noun guest is guest's.Example: What is the guest's name?
The correct way to write the plural possessive of the name "Harris" would be "the Harrises' house." This indicates that the house is owned by multiple individuals with the last name "Harris."
To form the plural possessive form for names, add an apostrophe and an "s" after the plural form of the name. For example, if the name is "Smith" and it is pluralized as "Smiths," the plural possessive form would be "Smiths'.
The possessive form of the noun fiance is fiance's.Example: Her fiance's name is Hector.