Jr. is not a suffix, it is an abbreviation for Junior, a part of a person's name (such as Martin Luther King, Jr.). As part of a name, Jr. or Junior is a proper noun and always capitalized.
The possessive form can be written as Jr.'s or Junior's.
Example: Martin Luther King Jr.'s speeches have become part of American history.
The plural form is suffixes. The plural possessive is suffixes'.
Anything added after your name, like Jr., III, etc.
It's a possessive suffix - meaning 'of or relating to'.
A sound or syllable added to the end of a word to change its meaning or to form a new word.
No, it is singular, the possessive form of it is its. The plural form of it is they or them, and the possessive form is their.To answer the question directly: there is no such word as ITS'.
The correct possessive form is Junior's.
The plural form is suffixes. The plural possessive is suffixes'.
The possessive form for the noun seamstress is seamstress's; the seamstress's scissors. The additional s is added after the apostrophe because the possessive form is pronounced the same as the plural form with the -es suffix.
Short form for Junior
regional
Anything added after your name, like Jr., III, etc.
The possessive form is: Bob Jones, Junior'sExample: Bob Jones, Junior's father is Bradley Jones.
It's a possessive suffix - meaning 'of or relating to'.
No, 's is not a suffix. 's is used for possessive nouns.
A sound or syllable added to the end of a word to change its meaning or to form a new word.
It can be a substitue for "is," or it can be a possessive suffix.
Yes, "Jr" is a suffix typically used when a child is given the same name as their parent. It signifies that they are the "junior" with the same name as the parent.