The possessive form of the noun singer is singer's.
Example: The singer's performance received high praise.
Yes, singer's is the possessive form for the singular noun singer.Example: The singer's performance received high praise.
The plural form of the noun singer is singers.The plural possessive form is singers'.example: The singers' voices filled the auditorium.
Pianists is plural The possessive is painists'
The singular possessive noun form is trumpet's.
The singular possessive form is contralto's.
Yes, singer's is the possessive form for the singular noun singer.Example: The singer's performance received high praise.
The plural form of the noun singer is singers.The plural possessive form is singers'.example: The singers' voices filled the auditorium.
The correct spelling of the singular noun is audience (one audience).The correct singular possessive form is audience's.Example: The audience's reaction made the singer smile.
No, "him" is not a possessive pronoun. It is an objective pronoun used as the object of a verb or preposition. Possessive pronouns include "his" as a possessive form of "he."
No, he is not possessive. The possessive form would be his.
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 of "ant" is "ant's" and 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.
The singular possessive is Richard's; the plural possessive is Richards'.
Children's is a plural possessive.Singular: childSingular possessive: child'sPlural: childrenPlural possessive: children's