You mean genitive? Sororum.
In English, a noun or pronoun is described by its number and case. "My" is singular in number and possessive in case. "Our" is plural in number and possessive in case. Plural simply means more than one.
No No No
The possessive form of the plural noun hours is hours'.
The plural possessive form is mothers-in-law's.
No, the word "mens" is an incorrect form.The plural noun is "men". The plural possessive form is men's.
The plural possessive form is countries'.Example: All of the countries' delegates had to agree to the plan.
Your is the possessive form for a singular or plural noun and a subject or object noun.
The English equivalent of the Latin word 'quid' is the following: 'what'. Latin is a language that uses case endings to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb, and to the rest of the sentence. Such a characteristic is called declension. The declension of 'quid' is as follows: in the subject or nominative case, 'quid' in the singular, and 'quae' in the plural; in the possessive or genitive case, 'cuius' in the singular, and 'quorum' in the plural; in the indirect object or dative case, 'cui' in the singular and 'quibus' in the plural; in the direct object or accusative case, 'quid' in the singular, and 'quae' in the plural; and in the prepositional object or ablative case, 'quo' in the singular and 'quibus' in the plural. The meanings of the plural forms are the following: 'quae' means 'what'; 'quorum' means 'of what'; 'quibus' means 'to what'; and 'quibus' means 'by what'.
The correct example of the plural possessive case is D) women's plans.
In this case, the form "neighbor's" is singularpossessive.The plural form of the noun neighbor is neighbors.The plural possessive is "the neighbors' cars".A plural noun ending is "s" form the possessive by adding an apostrophe after the ending "s".
In the possessive case, pronouns show ownership or relationship. Some common pronouns in the possessive case are: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, and theirs. These pronouns indicate that something belongs to or is associated with the person or thing mentioned.
No, the possessive noun audiences' is the plural possessive form.The singular noun is audience.The singular possessive form is audience's.Examples:The audience's reaction was enthusiastic. (singular possessive)All of his audiences' reactions are enthusiastic. (plural possessive)