The possessive noun is the citizen's shouts.
The possessive noun is the citizen's shouts.
The possessive form of the plural noun shouts is shouts'.Example: We scanned the area to determine the shouts' origin.
The possessive form of the noun mayor is mayor's.example: The mayor's appearance caused the crowd to stop and listen.
The possessive form for the plural noun citizen is citizens'.
To make "citizens" possessive, add an apostrophe and an "s" at the end. For example: "the citizens' rights" shows that the rights belong to the citizens.
The plural form for the noun citizen is citizens.The plural possessive form is citizens'.Example: The bridge was funded by hundreds of citizens' contributions.
No. Citizens on its own is not a possessive noun; it is a plural noun.To make it possessive, you can do either of the following:A citizen of a country has certain rigets, so they are the citizen's rights.All citizens of a country have certain rights, so because we are referring to the plural of citizens, it becomes citizens' rights.
The singular noun is citizen. The singular possessive form is citizen's.The plural noun is citizens. The plural possessive form is citizens'.Examples:You can't restrict a citizen's right to those records. (singular)All of the citizens' petitions will be reviewed by the board. (plural)
No, the noun 'citizen' is a singular noun, a word for one person.The plural form is citizens, a word for two or more of people.The plural possessive form is citizens'.A possessive noun indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A plural noun that ends with an s forms its possessive by adding an apostrophe (') to the end of the word.A noun that does not end with an s forms its possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.Example sentences:A citizen must register to vote. (singular)The mayor responded to the citizen's letter. (singular possessive)Hundreds of citizens lined the street to watch the parade. (plural)The citizens' committee discussed the proposal. (plural possessive)
The word 'shouts' is both a noun (shout, shouts) and a verb (shout, shouts, shouting, shouted). Examples: Noun: The shouts of the crowd were drowning out the speaker's words. Verb: The coach shouts instructions from the bench.
The nouns in the sentence are:classtimesenior citizens' (compound possessive noun)center
The plural form of the noun settlement is settlementsThe plural possessive form is settlements'.Examples: The early settlements' citizens had to build their own communities.