The plural possessive form is audiences'.
None are. (see the related questions below)The plural possessive of editor is editors' but it cannot take a possessive in the combined form "editor in chief" -- the plural possessive is editors in chief's.
Watches' Take the plural form of the noun "watch", which is "watches", then add an apostrophe at the end. As in the sentence: "Ranged across the jeweller's counter, the watches' hands all showed the same time."
There are two forms of pronouns that show possession.Possessive pronouns take the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.Possessive adjectives describe a noun as belonging to someone or something. A possessive adjective is placed just before the noun it describes.The possessive pronoun and possessive adjective form of the personal pronoun 'he' is his.Examples:Jack lives on this street. The house on the corner is his. (possessive pronoun)Jack lives on this street. His house is on the corner. (possessive adjective)
No. Hours is a plural noun. There is an adjective "hourly" that refers to things done by or on the hour. if you use 'hour' singularly, you can form the possessive adjective hour's. To do this with 'hours' you would have to create an adverbial (e.g. three hours) and take the possessive of that (e.g. three hours' time).
weaponry I'm not sure of the correct answer but weaponry is wrong, I'm take a quiz and it's the same question and the choices are: ---- (A) Weapons(B) Weapon's(C)Weapons'(D) Weapon' so one of these is the correct answer
The possessive form of "mine" is "mine's." However, it is more common to use "my" as a possessive pronoun instead of using the possessive form of "mine." For example, "This book is mine" can be rephrased as "This is my book."
The possessive form for the noun degree is degree's. Example: Your degree's value should be measured in where it will take you, not what it cost you.
In general, to form a singular possessive of a noun, one adds "'s" to the word, as in "Bob's." By contrast, possessive pronouns never take apostrophes - its, his, hers, theirs, etc.
That would be harnesses’ meanwhile take a look at these military tactical dog harnesses synergyandlovellc. com
The pronoun is his, a possessive adjective.A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.The possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.Note: The clue to the correct pronoun is the singular noun 'guitar'. If the noun was the plural form 'guitars', then the correct possessive adjective would be the plural form "will take their guitars..."
None are. (see the related questions below)The plural possessive of editor is editors' but it cannot take a possessive in the combined form "editor in chief" -- the plural possessive is editors in chief's.
The word 'neither' is a conjunction which doesn't have a plural or possessive form. The word 'neither' is an adjective which doesn't have a plural or possessive form. The word 'neither' is an adverb which doesn't have a plural or possessive form. The word 'neither' is an indefinite pronoun meaning not one and not the other of two or more people or things. There is no plural or possessive form for saying 'not one or the other'. The pronoun 'neither' can take a singular or plural verb form, depending on use.
The possessive form of the plural noun people is people's.Example: When people's emotions take over, disaster often follows.
Yes, but the possessive its doesn't take an apostrophe.
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.
No, the noun "employees" is the plural form of the singular noun "employee".Example: Do you have one employee or two employees?The singular possessive form is employee's.The plural possessive form is employees'.Examples:The new employee's name is Jack.We each take turns cleaning the employees' lunchroom.
The noun phrase 'my dad' is a possessive form.The word 'my' is a pronoun called a possessive adjective, used to take they place of the noun (name) of the speaker.Example: My dad taught me to ride mybicycle.