My brothers-in-law are my sisters' misters.
I don't know which of the sisters' husbands he is.
Sisters' is a plural possessive, meaning "belonging to the sisters." The sisters' dog is not very friendly. We went to the sisters' party.
The sisters' bond was unbreakable. She borrowed one of her sisters' shoes.
Example sentence - Every night the sisters would read aloud from the old book and discuss it the next morning.
I will invite all of my sisters-in-law to dinner tomorrow night.
i think it would be Julia
I
The sentence "either nisha or her sisters is at fault" is not correct because of lack of subject-verb agreement in number and lack of proper capitalization of the first letter of the proper name. When two elements of the subject of a sentence are linked by an alternative coordinating conjunction ("or" or "nor"), the proper number of the verb is determined by whichever of the linked elements is closer to the verb in the sentence. In the given sentence, the plural element "sisters" is closer to the verb, so that the sentence should read, "Either Nisha or her sisters are at fault." Note for contrast, "Either Nisha's sisters or Nisha herself is at fault."
Amy was one of the five quintuplet sisters, and she didn't look like any of her sisters.
The sisters had a play in public.
Yes, family is a noun in this sentence. It is also the the subject and the object of a preposition in this sentence.
My sisters' cat is brown and orange.putting an apostrophe after the S makes the word sisters possessive.
My sisters wrangle over control of the remote.