The plural of a "girl's school" is "girls' school."
Girls school..... this means a school for girls. Girls' school is the possessive and would imply that the girls owned the school.
Yes, the form girls' is the plural possessive form of the noun girl.The girls' boarding school is the boarding school of the girls or the boarding school for girls.
The plural possessive is: girls' hockey team (a hockey team for girls).
The plural of the noun girl is girls.
The possessive form of the plural noun girls is girls'.Example: The girls' coats all hung in a neat row.All English nouns ending in s in the plural form the plural possessive by adding an apostrophe to the end of the word.
The plural of girl's (singular possessive) is girls'(plural possessive).Example:The girl's coat is missing. (coat of one girl)The girls' coats are missing. (coats of more than one girl)
The plural form of "girl" is "girls".
The plural possessive of girl is girls'.
The plural form for the noun girl is girls.The plural possessive form is girls'.example: I made the girls' lunches and left them on the counter.
No, the word girls is a plural noun. It could be replaced by the plural third-person pronouns (they and them).
The plural form of the singular noun 'school' is schools.
No, the word "girls" is the plural form of the singular noun "girl".The singular possessive form is girl's.The plural possessive form is girls'.Examples:A girl's coat hung by the door. (singular)All of the girls' coats hung in a row. (plural)