This depends, If you mean that there is more than one woman, but one hat, then it's, "The women's hat." If you mean that there is only one woman, but many hats, then it's "The woman's hats." If there is more than one woman and multiple hats, then it's, "The women's hats."
The women's hats.
The plural of "woman" is "women". "Womans" is not a plural form of the word "woman".
The plural form for the singular hat is hats.The plural possessive form is hats'.Example: The hat's band was black silk.
No, because "one boy's hat" is singular possessive, indicating that the hat belongs to one boy. Plural possessive would involve two or more entities possessing something, such as "the boys' hats" indicating that multiple boys own hats.
The plural form of "contest" is "contests". Just add an "s" at the end to make it plural.
Some examples of incorrect plural nouns and their correct forms are: "childs" to "children," "womans" to "women," "mouses" to "mice," and "sheeps" to "sheep." It's important to pay attention to these plural forms to use proper grammar.
The plural of "woman" is "women". "Womans" is not a plural form of the word "woman".
The plural form for the singular hat is hats.The plural possessive form is hats'.Example: The hat's band was black silk.
hats
hats
No. Ladies' is plural. You want "This lady's hat."
Hat is chapeau, with the plural "hats" being chapeaux.Also of use might be: chapeau à plume (a feathered hat).
i believe nothing is wrong with his hat, he simply just wears it, and hides his golden LONG hair. as shown in the episode, how to cut a womans hair
No, because "one boy's hat" is singular possessive, indicating that the hat belongs to one boy. Plural possessive would involve two or more entities possessing something, such as "the boys' hats" indicating that multiple boys own hats.
you will (second person singular) - du wirst you will (second person plural) - ihr werdet you have (singular) - du hast you have (plural) - ihr habt she has - sie hat he has - er hat
The hat is "le chapeau" (masculine noun) in French. Plural: les chapeaux (irregular "x" ending)
If an apostrophe is after an s, it typically indicates possession or a contraction. For possession, it shows that something belongs to the noun immediately before the apostrophe. In contractions, it signifies that letters have been removed to combine two words into one.
First you get some fur, then you make it into a hat. The details depend on exactly what sort of hat you're trying to make.