to indicate possession , to short words,
Yes. The play's actors perhaps.
The verbs "have" and "possess" indicate literal possession, but not legal possession. The verb "to own" or "to inherit" implies legal rights.* The type of noun that can indicate ownership is the possessive or genitive case.
Relationship or position in space: Prepositions are used to show the relationship or position of one object to another. Examples include "on," "in," "at," "under," and "beside." Time: Prepositions are used to indicate time, such as "during," "before," "after," and "since." Direction: Prepositions indicate direction, like "towards," "into," "out of," and "through." Cause or reason: Prepositions can indicate cause or reason, such as "because of," "due to," "for," and "with." Possession: Prepositions indicate possession, like "of," "to," and "from."
If the plural noun has possession, indicate it by using an apostrophe after the S.
Yes, it's used to indicate possession too.
Grandparent's house
"Von" in German means "from" or "of" in English. It is a preposition used to indicate origin, possession, or relationship.
An apostrophe followed by an "s" is used to indicate possession or ownership of something. For example, "Mary's book" indicates that the book belongs to Mary. It is also used to create contractions, such as "can't" for "cannot."
"Sarah's cat's in the garden because it's her favorite spot to nap." The first apostrophe in "Sarah's" indicates possession ('the cat that belongs to Sarah'), while the second apostrophe in "it's" is a contraction of "it is."
To show possession after the letter z, add an apostrophe and the letter s (z's). For pluralizing a word that ends in z, add an apostrophe before the s without another s (z').
's is used to indicate possession for singular nouns like boy's pen, dog's tail etc. s' is used to indicate possession for plural nouns when they end by s like girls' football team, all dogs' tails are round etc.