A singular noun is a word for one person, place, or thing.
A possessive noun shows ownership or possession, origin or purpose of another noun.
A singular noun shows possession by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word. A singular noun already ending with s can show possession by just adding an apostrophe (') to the end of the word, or an apostrophe s ('s) can be added, both forms are accepted.
Examples:
Jack's bicycle is new.
The terrace had a view of the city'slights.
A bird's nest is right outside my window.
I put the memo on the boss' desk. Or: I put the memo on the boss's desk.
Forming the possessive of singular nouns involves adding an apostrophe and the letter "s" to indicate ownership or relationship. For example, "the dog's tail" shows that the tail belongs to the dog.
The singular possessive of "headdress" is "headdress's".
The singular possessive of all English nouns is formed by adding 's: potato's
No, "brother's" is a possessive form for singular nouns. It indicates that something belongs to one brother.
The two rules for forming possessive nouns are adding an apostrophe followed by an "s" to singular nouns (e.g. the dog's bone) and adding an apostrophe after the "s" for plural nouns that already end in "s" (e.g. the dogs' bones).
To convert a singular noun into a plural possessive form, simply add an apostrophe after the "s" of the plural form of the noun. For example, "dog" becomes "dogs'" in its plural possessive form.
Yes. The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s.
Singular common nouns and proper nouns are made possessive by addingapostrophe s ('s) even when they end in s. Examples:boss'sclass'sCarlos'sDoris'sParis'sTexas'sMassachusetts'sHonduras's
The singular possessive of all English nouns is formed by adding 's: potato's
The singular possessive of "headdress" is "headdress's".
The singular possessive form is mother's.The plural possessive form is mothers'.
No, a possessive noun is formed by adding an -'s (or just an -' to the end of plural nouns already ending in -s) to the existing singular or plural noun; for example:singular=apple, singular possessive=apple's; plural=apples, plural possessive= apples'singular=boy, singular possessive=boy's; plural=boys, plural possessive=boys'singular=car, singular possessive=car's; plural=cars, plural possessive=cars'The nouns that drop the -y and add -ies is to form the plural are nouns ending in -y preceded by a consonant; for example:singular=ally; plural=allies (singular possessive=ally's; plural possessive=allies')singular=baby; plural=babies (singular possessive=baby's; plural possessive=babies')singular=city; plural=cities(singular possessive=city's; plural possessive=cities')
The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: helix's.
The possessive singular of all English nouns, regardless of spelling, is formed by adding 's: heiress's (pronounced as if it were a plural).
To convert a singular noun into a plural possessive form, simply add an apostrophe after the "s" of the plural form of the noun. For example, "dog" becomes "dogs'" in its plural possessive form.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing. A singular noun is the basic form of the noun. English language nouns come from many source languages, so there are no specific rules for forming singular nouns.Examples of singular nouns:appleboatchilddooreggflowergreenhouricejokekneelifemonkeynieceonionproblemquestionratsalarytrusturgevacationwomanx-rayyouthzircon
The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: boss's
Indices are indexes, so the singular would be index.