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.
Virginia's is already the plural possessive form for Virginia. If you are referring to multiple things belonging to Virginia, you would use "Virginia's" followed by the object being possessed.
To make "telephone" plural possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "telephones" if there is more than one telephone being discussed. For example, "The telephones' cords were tangled."
"Secretaries" is the plural form. To make it possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "secretaries'," as in "the secretaries' schedules."
To make a plural non-s ending noun possessive, add an apostrophe followed by an "s." For example, "women" becomes "women's" and "children" becomes "children's."
The noun 'sights' is the plural form for the noun 'sight'. Example:We drove through the mountains to see the sights.The singular possessive form is sight's; the plural possessive form is sights'. Examples:The doctor was very pleased with my sight's improvement.The sights' alignment on this rifle is way off.
To make the plural noun "days" possessive, you add an apostrophe after the "s" without an additional "s". For example, "two days' notice" or "seven days' worth of work."
To make "telephone" plural possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "telephones" if there is more than one telephone being discussed. For example, "The telephones' cords were tangled."
"Secretaries" is the plural form. To make it possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "secretaries'," as in "the secretaries' schedules."
Owner's IS the possessive for owner. The apostrophe and -S make it possessive. The possessive for the plural owners would be owners'
The plural possessive is others'. You simply add an apostrophe to a plural ending in 's' to make it possessive.
The plural of Inuit can be either Inuit or Inuits. If you are using Inuit as the plural, then the plural possessive is Inuit's; if you are using Inuits as the plural, then the plural possessive is Inuits'.
The plural possessive is charges'. When the plural form ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe to make it possessive.
The plural possessive form of solvent is solvents'.
'es is not used to make the word fox into a singular possessive noun, rather you should add 's to fox to do so. If you add the suffix -es to fox, it would then make the word plural, and if you add a ' to the end of foxes, it would make the word possessive. fox = singular noun fox's = singular possessive noun foxes = plural noun foxes' = plural possessive noun
The plural form for the noun cricket is crickets. The plural possessive form is crickets'.Example: The crickets' chirping reminded us that we were in the country.
The singular possessive form for match is match's.The plural possessive form for the plural noun matches is matches'.
Depends on the noun. Apple would be apples' in the plural possessive. Cherrywould be cherries'. Monkey, which would be monkeys'. Cactus would be cacti's. Chorus would be choruses'. There are many other examples out there. *To make the plural possessive add and apostrophe after the 's'. The boys lied to their mothers. Boys = plural. The boys' mother were very angry. Boys' = plural possessive.
To make the plural noun "meteors" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: meteors'