Oro or gold!
The possessive form is King Charles's laws.
The correct possessive form is King Charles's. Example sentence:King Charles's shoes were pinching his feet.
No, expedition is singular. The plural form is expeditions.
King Charles I of England granted the region that is the present-day Carolinas to Sir Robert Heath in 1629. The region was named Carolus, a Latin form of Charles, in honor of King Charles. King Charles II, his son, changed the spelling to Carolina in 1663. The region of Carolina was eventually divided into South Carolina and North Carolina, and both became states in 1788.
Expeditions.
Originally, North and South Carolina was one colony named after King Charles I, the king of England who reigned during the its settlement. The one large colony was known as Carolian. Later on, the colony was divided into the North and South Carolina. The name Charles comes from Carolus, which is the Latinized form of the Old German ceorl for freeman of the lowest rank. Carolina is the feminine form of Carolus.
The plural form of the proper noun Charles is Charleses.The plural possessive form is Charleses'.Example: The two Charleses' last names are White and Green.
The Carolina colonies were named by King Charles II of England in honor of his father Charles I. The Latin form of Charles is Carolus was feminized to Carolina. The colony split into northern and southern colonies because of political and economic differences.
The possessive form for the proper noun Charles is Charles's.Example: Charles's bike was left in the driveway again.
The first King of Spain was Carlos I of Spain. He was also Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor.Before Carlos I the Iberian Peninsula was occupied by smaller kingdoms and principalities each with it's own ruler/monarch. Spain was never truly unified until Carlos inherited the Kingdoms of Castile, Leon, and Aragon bringing Spain into existence as a single Monarchy.The first king of the combined Kingdom of Spain was Charles I. Charles was the first king after the Kingdom of Aragon and Kingdom of Castile combined to form Spain.
The plural form for the noun Charles is Charleses; the plural possessive form is Charleses'.Example: Both Charleses are in my class but the Charleses' desks are not together.
The plural form of "king" is "kings."