The correct plural form of the noun company is companies.
The correct plural possessive form is companies'.
Examples:
The company's logo is a registered trademark. (singular possessive)
All companies' safety rules must be prominently posted. (plural possessive)
The correct form is "its" for the possessive form in the plural. "Its" is used for both the singular and plural possessive forms, without an apostrophe.
Yes, the correct plural possessive form is oxen's. An irregular plural noun forms the possessive in the same manner as a singular noun, by adding the apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.
No, but its without the apostrophe is the correct, the singular possessive form of the pronoun it. Pronouns do not use an apostrophe to show possession.The plural of it is they/them.The possessive of they is their/theirs.example: Mr Smith is their teacher. And that classroom is theirs.
The genitive( possessive) of a plural noun ending in -s adds an apostrophe to the final s: companies'
The correct form is: Lullabies' To make a possessive from a plural word ending in "s", you simply add the apostrophe after the "s".
Plural possessive is "their" Possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe.
Veterans - plural does not have an apostrophe.Veteran's - singular possessive does have an apostrophe.Veterans' - plural possessive does have an apostrophe.
No, in the form "stones throw", the noun "stones" is the plural form of the noun "stone".A possessive noun is indicated by an apostrophe s ('s) or just an apostrophe (') added to the end of a plural noun that already ends with an s.The correct plural possessive form is: stones'throwThe singular possessive form is: a stone'sthrow
In punctuation, the comma comes before the apostrophe when it follows a plural possessive. For example, "The dogs', wagging tails" is correct.
Yes, that is correct. Don't use an apostrophe (registration's) - that makes it possessive.
Yes mice's is correct for the plural possessive of mice.
The plural is corporations. The plural possessive is corporations' (apostrophe only).