No, it should be Chiefs of office
Chiefs is the correct plural form of chief.
I believe my offices and I are well known.
The Joints Chiefs of Staff ( JCS ).
that is correct.. (secretaries' offices)
Correct me if I'm wrong but I believe the answer to the question goes like the following: 27 floors (37 offices) = 999 offices in the building
If it is the Cultural Offices asking for the letter to be prepared then you should say ...... for the Cultural Offices Even if the letter is going to the Cultural Offices I think 'for' is better than 'to'
Doctors' offices ask for photo ID to verify the identity of the patient and ensure that the correct medical records and information are being accessed and provided.
The chiefs of the local tribes gathered for a meeting.I will inform the chiefs.
yes the cheyenne did have chiefs
Chief's I assume. If you are referring to an item of a group of chiefs, you would use chiefs'
here is chiefs in a sentance with a predicate nominative:In pursuing the fire bug, the Fire Chiefs from three counties were relentless.here is chiefs as a predicate nominative:In each tribe the strongest braves became chiefs.
The plural of "chief" is "chiefs" In the plural: "Who were their chiefs?"