The possessive form is relatives'.
The plural is relatives. The plural possessive is relatives'.
The possessive noun for relative is: relative's"My friend lives up the road. One of my relatives lives down the road. My relative's house is the white one on the corner."
No, the term 'your relatives' is a noun phrase made up of the plural, common noun 'relatives' described by the possessive adjective 'your'.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing.Examples (proper nouns in bold):The Hamiltons are your relatives.Are your relatives are Canadians?We will pick up your relatives at the American Airlines' terminal.
No, there is no vague pronoun. The only antecedent for the personal pronoun 'they' and the possessive adjective 'their' is the noun 'Patterns'. A vague pronoun reference means that more than one noun could be the antecedent, it is not clear which noun is the antecedent. Example: Jane and her friend June visited her relatives in Florida. Whose relatives, Jane's or June's?
Him is not possessive. The possessive would be 'his'.
No, he is not possessive. The possessive form would be his.
Whose means of asking someone of whom it belong or who knows any information in which an apostrophe has to occur. Example: 'Whose is this keyring?' 'Whose relatives had a poodle?' ====================================== 'Whose' is the possessive form of the pronoun 'who.'
The singular possessive is biker's; the plural possessive is bikers'.
Women's is a plural possessive. The singular possessive is woman's
The singular possessive is ant's.The plural possessive is ants'.
The possessive form of "he" is "his": He did his homework after dinner.
The singular possessive is "ox's". Another contributor wrote "oxen's", but that is the plural possessive.