The plural possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe to the plural ending -s or -es. The plural of dressis dresses. So the plural possessive is dresses'. Notice that the apostrophe comes after the -s, not before it. And example in a sentence is: I like the color of those dresses, but I don't like the dresses' patterns.
The plural possessive form of "dress" is "dresses'."
The plural possessive of "country" is "countries'".
The singular possessive form of "dress" is "dress's".
Somebody's possessive form is "somebody's." For example, "I found somebody's phone on the table."
No, "dresses" is a plural noun. The singular form is "dress."
John's car's wheel's valve's cap's color's hue hurt Lily's sister's cat's ears' sensitivity greatly.
No, the word "divers" is the plural form of the singular noun "diver".The possessive form of the singular noun "diver" is diver's.The possessive form of the plural noun "divers" is divers'.
The plural possessive of "country" is "countries'".
The possessive form of the plural noun 'women' is women's.Example: A women's group raised the money for the playground.
The plural form for the noun dress is dresses.The plural possessive form is dresses'.example: These dresses' designers just have no concept of a normal body type.
Peoples isn't a word. The noun people is the plural form for person. The possessive form requires an apostrophe -s, not just the -s. For example: Singular possessive: person's Plural possessive: persons' Plural possessive: people's
child's
The possessive noun for "teachers" is "teachers'."
Dress code is a noun. The plural form is dress codes.
Plural possessive case of butterfly is butterflies' (apostrophe after the word butterflies). The plural form of the noun butterfly is butterflies so if you are saying the wings of the butterflies, for example, you say: 'The butterflies' wings'.
The possessive form of "country" is "country's."
The singular possessive form of "dress" is "dress's".
It's horses' or horse's.