The possessive form of the plural noun traditions is traditions'.
Example: These traditions' origins are centuries old.
The plural of "possess" is "possesses," as in "He possesses many skills."
The word 'possess' is a verb and therefore has no plural. The plural of 'possession' is 'possessions'.
The plural possessive form of "box" is "boxes'". This indicates that multiple boxes possess something.
The plural possessive noun of "Maria" is "Marias'" if you want to show that multiple Marias possess something.
The future tense of "possess" is "will possess."
Possess is present tense. The past tense is possessed.
The root word of possessed is "possess."
Possess is a verb. Its plural form (the one used with plural subjects) is possess, while the form used with singular subjects is possesses.Examples:We possess, they possess.He, she or it possesses.The noun form of possess is possession, plural possessions.
volunteers's
Pseudopodia is the plural of the singular noun pseudopodium.
The plural possessive form of "box" is "boxes'". This indicates that multiple boxes possess something.
The plural possessive noun of "Maria" is "Marias'" if you want to show that multiple Marias possess something.
The plural form of the noun business is businesses.The plural possessive form is businesses'.Example: There was damage to several businesses' exteriors.
No, the form of the possess noun is not correct:The correct singular possessive is witness's.The correct plural possessive is witnesses'.
The future tense of "possess" is "will possess."
Possess is present tense. The past tense is possessed.
The plural form of person is people, so you should use that word. If the people possess something, then you use people's.
The root word of possessed is "possess."
For plural possessives, add the apostrophe after the final "s." Example: The mountians have beautiful peaks. The peaks' color was a bright white. That is saying that the (multiple) peaks all possess the same attribute--in this case, brightness and the color white. Note: If the plural is Greek- or Latinic-based & doesn't end in "s" (e.g., cacti, data, octopi, etc.), then & only then add an apostrophe + an "s." Example: The cacti are green. The cacti's greenish color allow them to use photosynthesis. That is saying that all of the cacti (cacti = plural of cactus) possess the ability to use photosynthesis due to their green coloration. :)