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The sentence should read, "The man stole the ladies' handbags."Without the apostrophe, the noun ladies is simply the plural form of lady. In this sentence, the possessive form is required because the handbags belong to the ladies.The singular possessive form is lady's; the plural possessive is ladies'.
Ladies.
Ladies.
The common nouns are group and ladies; the word 'a' is an indefinite article; 'beautiful' is an adjective.The noun group is a singular, common noun; a word for a number of people or things located together or classed together.The noun ladies is a plural, common noun; a word for two or more adult female persons, used in a context of polite and mannerly female persons.ANSWER: There is a common expression, a "bevy" of beauties.The noun bevy is a singular, common, collective noun; a word for a large group of people or things of a particular kind.
There is not a word that means a group of beautiful ladies. However, lovely ladies or hot mamas is often used to refer to beautiful ladies.
Not if you are trying to express a simple plural. Teammate is singular, teammates is plural. Indicating possession by a group of teammates, you would use teammates'. The s following the apostrophe is redundant and awkward.
Group's.
Pink Ladies when referring to the group .
The word group's is singular possessive for the noun group; the apostrophe s indicates that something in the sentence belongs to the group.
A Gossip
A wolfpack
A group of ladies could be a gaggle, a coven, a herd, a circle, a group, a society, or a community. There are many words, but few of them are restricted in usage to refer to women only.