Either salmon or salmons is correctly used as the plural of salmon.
(Salmons is rare in standard English but accepted, especially when talking about several type of salmon. There are dialects that do use salmons regularly)
When you speak of more than one salmon, you can change the phrasing to indicate the plural. For example; 'There are many salmon in the river' or 'We caught a lot of salmon today'.
Like 'sheep' and 'deer' and 'fish', salmon may be both plural and singular. Unlike sheep, the plural salmons is also used, as is the plural fishes, and more rarely the plural deers.
The possessive form of the plural noun ladies is ladies'.example: We served salmon for the ladies' lunch.
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The plural form is valleys. The plural possessive is valleys'.
The plural form is replies. The plural possessive is replies'.
The plural form is founders. The plural possessive is founders'.
No, it is singular, the possessive form of it is its. The plural form of it is they or them, and the possessive form is their.To answer the question directly: there is no such word as ITS'.
The plural form is branches. The plural possessive is branches'.
The plural possessive form of "mass" is "masses'".
The plural possessive is experiments'.
The plural form is ravines. The plural possessive is ravines'.
The plural form of the noun mouthful is mouthfuls.The plural possessive form is mouthfuls'.
The plural form of the noun kiss is kisses.The plural possessive form is kisses'.