Generally you would put an apostrophe at the end of the word (though frequenly also 'es,), e.g. the Jones' cat (which is pronounced as though it ended with es) or the Joneses cat (which looks funny but is acceptable)
A good example is the plural possessive "ours"
The plural possessive is charges'. When the plural form ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe to make it possessive.
Only nouns and pronouns have possessive forms. The word 'write' is a verb.
The plural form for the noun colony is colonies. The plural possessive form is colonies'.
singular possessive of "eagle": eagle's plural possessive of "eagle": eagles'
women's
plural possessive form: babies' singular possessive form: baby's
Warriors' is the plural possessive. Warrior's is the singular possessive.
Yes, to write the possessive form of the plural noun "classes," you add an apostrophe after the "s" at the end of the word, like this: classes'.
The plural possessive is companies'. When a word ends in -y and the letter before y is a consonant, drop -y and add -ies to form the plural. To form the possessive, add ' (apostrophe) to the end of the word.
A noun that ends with the letter z forms the plural by adding -es to the end of the word. For example, the singular Heinz becomes the Heinzes.The plural possessive form is the Heinzes'.example: The Heinzes' children are twins.
possessive plural word for the bishops: bishops'
The plural possessive noun for "sisters" is "sisters'".