the singular possessive for the word leaf is leaf apostrophe s
No, the noun family is a singular, common noun, a word for any related group of people or things.The possessive form for the noun family is family's.
the earth's
The singular possessive form of "dress" is "dress's".
Dress.
The plural possessive form is the engines' noise.
The singular form of the noun dresses is dress.The singular possessive form is dress's.Example: That dress's price is much too high.
The singular possessive of "sister" is "sister's." For example, "I am borrowing my sister's dress."
It means "the [feminine, singular] to dress" It's gibberish.
No, "dresses" is a plural noun. The singular form is "dress."
The girl's dress was pink. Because it is singular, there is an apostrophe s ('s) added on the end of the word.
The noun dress is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a garment, a thing.The word dress is also a verb and an adjective.Example uses:Noun: I bought a new dress for the benefit tonight.Verb: I will dress after I have my breakfast.Adjective: A dress coat will really make that suit look great.