The possessive form is 'the animal's behavior'.
The possessive form is animal's behavior.
The plural possessive form of the behavior of the animals is the animals' behaviour. Therefore the possessive noun is animals'.
The plural form of the noun animal is animals.The plural possessive form is animals'.Example: The sanctuary allows visitors at the animals' enclosures.
"He" can function as a possessive pronoun (e.g., "This is his book"), but it is not a possessive noun on its own.
The word 'his' is not a noun; the word 'his' is a pronoun; a possessive pronoun and a possessive adjective.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to a a male person or animal; for example:The black car is his.A possessive adjective is a word that takes describes a noun as belonging to a male person or animal. A possessive adjective is placed before the noun it describes; for example:His car is black.
No, the plural form of the noun animal is animals (no apostrophe).The apostrophe s ('s) added to the end of the noun forms the possessive noun, indicating that something belongs to an animal.Examples:An animal has been raiding the trash bin. (singular noun)You see here are the animal's footprints. (possessive noun)
The possessive noun for girl (singular) is girl's for multiple girls the possessive word would be girls'
The possessive form of the plural noun animals is animals'.Example: The animals' enclosure allows plenty of room for them to run.
Yes, behavior is an abstract noun, a word for conduct, the way a person or animal behaves.
No, "king's" is not a possessive noun. It is a singular noun that refers to a male ruler or monarch. The possessive form of "king" would be "king's" when indicating ownership.
The possessive noun of mosquito is mosquito's, e.g. The mosquito's high-pitched whine was particularly annoying. If there were several mosquitoes, the possessive plural noun would be mosquitoes'.
The plural form is the bears' cares.