My mother's name is Margaret.
China's history is long and interesting.
I love Jane's recipe for brownies.
The dog's paws were all muddy.
The store's shelves were empty.
The cat's whiskers are long and fluffy.
The possessive form of the noun sentence is sentence's.Example: You can edit the sentence's length.The pronoun that that takes the place of the noun sentence is it.The possessive form (a possessive adjective) is its.Example: The sentence is too long. You can edit its length.
The word mother's is the possessive noun in that sentence.
To create a possessive sentence, you typically add an apostrophe and an "s" ('s) to the noun that owns or possesses the object. For example, "Sara's car is blue" shows possession of the car by Sara. Alternatively, for plural nouns ending in "s," you would only add an apostrophe after the "s" to indicate possession, such as "the students' project."
The possessive noun in the sentence is "Jo's." It shows that the homework belongs to Jo.
No, possessive nouns do not affect subject-verb agreement. Subject-verb agreement is about ensuring that the subject and verb in a sentence match in terms of number (singular or plural). Possessive nouns simply indicate ownership of something by someone.
The sentence "the towels of the hotels" contains no possessive noun. If however you rewrite the sentence as "the hotels' towels" then the possessive noun is hotels'.
The possessive noun is blanket's.
The possessive noun in the sentence is: cub'sThe possessive noun indicates that the den belongs to the cub (the den of the cub).
The plural possessive noun is racers'.
The possessive noun in the sentence is in the incorrect form.The correct possessive form for 'the toy of the dog' is 'the dog's toy'.
The possessive form of the noun sentence is sentence's.Example: You can edit the sentence's length.The pronoun that that takes the place of the noun sentence is it.The possessive form (a possessive adjective) is its.Example: The sentence is too long. You can edit its length.
"The ant colony's" is not a sentence, it's a noun phrase. There is no possessive pronoun in this noun phrase. There is no pronoun in this noun phrase.
The plural noun in this sentence is speeches and the possessive noun is people's.
The word mother's is the possessive noun in that sentence.
To create a possessive sentence, you typically add an apostrophe and an "s" ('s) to the noun that owns or possesses the object. For example, "Sara's car is blue" shows possession of the car by Sara. Alternatively, for plural nouns ending in "s," you would only add an apostrophe after the "s" to indicate possession, such as "the students' project."
Example sentence: A possessive noun is a noun indicating ownership, possession, purpose, or origin.
In the sentence, 'This country's history is very interesting.' the nouns are country's (a possessive noun), history, and interesting (a verbal noun; gerund).