The word sister's is a possessive, singular noun. It can also be a contraction of "sister is".
The word sisters is a plural noun and sisters' is a possessive, plural noun.
"Sister's" is possessive form of the singular noun "sister." To refer to more than one sister, you would use the plural form "sisters" without the apostrophe.
Yes, "sisters" is a plural noun because it refers to more than one female sibling.
The singular noun is "louse" and the plural noun is "lice."
"Book" is a noun that has both a singular and plural form: "book" (singular) and "books" (plural).
The plural possessive noun for "sisters" is "sisters'".
The noun mailbox is the singular form; the plural is mailboxes.
Yes, "sisters" is a plural noun because it refers to more than one female sibling.
No, the word sisters is simply the plural form for the singular noun sister.
The word sisters' is plural possessive. The singular is sister, singular possessive is sister's; the plural is sisters, the plural possessive is sisters'.
The plural form of sister is sisters.
The noun 'mice' is the plural form of the singular noun 'mouse'.
The singular noun is "louse" and the plural noun is "lice."
Plural nouns are used when the noun represents more than one. Examples: Singular, an apple; plural, two apples Singular, a sister; plural, three sisters Singular, my hope; plural, my hopes and dreams
"Book" is a noun that has both a singular and plural form: "book" (singular) and "books" (plural).
"Children" is a plural noun. The singular form is "child."
The noun 'circus' is a singular noun.The plural noun is 'circuses'.
The plural possessive noun for "sisters" is "sisters'".
The noun juggler is a singular noun. The plural noun is jugglers.