The word "one" does not typically show possession on its own. Possessive forms of "one" can be constructed by adding an apostrophe and an "s" after it, such as "one's."
You can spell the word "County" showing possession as "County's."
The pronouns "one's" and "it's" use an apostrophe to show possession. For example, "One's hat" and "It's time."
No, the apostrophe 's' in the word 'women' does not indicate possession. The word 'women' is the plural form of 'woman'. Possession is indicated by adding an apostrophe before or after the 's' at the end of a noun.
No, "theirs" is a possessive pronoun and does not require an apostrophe. The apostrophe is used in contractions or to show possession, but not in this case.
For singular possession, it would be customer's.For plural possession, it would be customers'.An apostrophe would not be placed on its own after the word customer.
You can spell the word "County" showing possession as "County's."
That is Diaz's cat.
Add 's.
no. to show possession you just say "that's yours" or something like that :) Ok thank you! But if I am saying for example (That is your tool kit, isn't it?) The word (your) doesn't get an aposthrope?
Possession
I take ownership of my mistakes and strive to learn from them.
Angel's wings -- one angel Angels' wings -- more than one angel Angels -- plural not possessing anything
No, "theirs" is a possessive pronoun and does not require an apostrophe. The apostrophe is used in contractions or to show possession, but not in this case.
The word 'possessive' is a noun and an adjective.The noun 'possessive' is a word for the case of nouns and pronouns expressing possession.The adjective 'possessive' is a word used to describe a noun as showing the desire to possess or control someone or something; used to describe a word as the grammatical tense expressing possession.
The pronouns "one's" and "it's" use an apostrophe to show possession. For example, "One's hat" and "It's time."
The word belongs is not a noun (nouns show possession), it's a verb Belongs is the third person singular, present for of the verb 'to belong'.
You add it at the end of the possession word with an apostrophe before the "s". Ex. My Aunt's car is old. Cindy's toy boat floated atop the water.