The plural form of the noun lady is ladies.
The plural possessive form is ladies'.
example: We're planning a ladies' night out.
The plural of "lady" is "ladies."
The plural form for the noun lady is ladies.
The plural form of the noun 'lady' is ladies.
The plural form of "lady" is "ladies."
Just GPSs, or plural possession: GP-S's.
The plural possessive of lady is ladies'.
The French word for lady is dame, the plural of which is dames.
The plural form of the noun lady is ladies.The plural possessive form is ladies'.example: We're planning a ladies' night out.
Lady's is a singular possessive noun; slipper is a singular noun. The plural form of lady is ladies; the plural possessive is ladies'. The plural form of slipper is slippers.Lady's slippers is the plural form of one lady possessing more than one slipper.Ladies' slippers is the plural form of more than one lady possessing more than one slipper.
f the noun is pluraland already ends in s, add an apostropheafter the s to show possession. Thefrogs’ skin is mottled. = the skin belongs to the frogs. Apostrophes for plural possession
No, "fires" does not have an apostrophe when used in its plural form. An apostrophe is used to indicate possession or contractions, but "fires" simply refers to multiple instances of fire. If you want to indicate possession, you would use "fire's" for singular possession or "fires'" for plural possession.
An apostrophe is this symbol ' . It can be used to show possession. It can also be used in plural possession, but not always for "its".