Apples' would be the plural possessive form of apple. The singular form would be apple's.
"The apple's taste was bitter to Snow White."
The plural of apple is apples. The plural possessive of apples is apples'
The singular possessive is fish's.
Buzz's is the singular possessive.
The possessive form is Amos's.
Mary's is the singular possessive form.
Apples'
No, the noun apples is a plural noun, a word for two or more apples.The possessive noun is apple's.The plural possessive noun is apples'.Examples:The apple's color was a bright red. (singular)The cost of the pies is based on the apples' prices. (plural)
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective, a word used to describe a noun as belonging to you. Possessive pronouns are not singular or plural, they can describe a singular or plural noun; for example:I've brought your apple.I've brought your apples.
No, a possessive noun is formed by adding an -'s (or just an -' to the end of plural nouns already ending in -s) to the existing singular or plural noun; for example:singular=apple, singular possessive=apple's; plural=apples, plural possessive= apples'singular=boy, singular possessive=boy's; plural=boys, plural possessive=boys'singular=car, singular possessive=car's; plural=cars, plural possessive=cars'The nouns that drop the -y and add -ies is to form the plural are nouns ending in -y preceded by a consonant; for example:singular=ally; plural=allies (singular possessive=ally's; plural possessive=allies')singular=baby; plural=babies (singular possessive=baby's; plural possessive=babies')singular=city; plural=cities(singular possessive=city's; plural possessive=cities')
Quantum is singular, not singular possessive. The singular possessive form is quantum's.
All possessive forms of nouns can be considered adjectives. The spelling "company's" is the singular possessive form.
The plural of apple is apples. The plural possessive of apples is apples'
Museum is singular. Museum's is singular possessive. Museums is plural. Museums' is plural possessive.
The singular possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, and its. The singular possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, and its.
The singular possessive of dish is dish's
The singular possessive is Martin's.
The singular possessive is fish's.