Actually, the possessors here are the children, not the coats. In English, a possessive refers to who owns it. The coats are what the children own. So, the apostrophe, showing posession, would go with the plural noun "children." It would look like this: The kindergarten children's coats...
The possessive form of "children" is "children's." For example: The children's toys are scattered all over the room.
The word children is the plural form for the singular noun child. The form children's is the plural possessive form. For plural nouns that do not end with -s, the possessive form does add the -'s to the end of the word.
The plural form of the noun child is children.The plural possessive form is children's.Examples:A child's coat hung by the door. (singular)The children's coats hung in a row. (plural)
The possessive form of the singular noun child is child's.Example: A child's coat hung by the door.The plural form of the noun child is children.The plural possessive form is children's.Example: The children's coats hung in a row by the door.
The possessive form of the singular noun child is child's.Example: A child's coat hung by the door.The plural form of the noun child is children.The plural possessive form is children's.Example: The children's coats hung in a row by the door.
The possessive form of the singular noun child is child's.Example: A child's coat hung by the door.The plural form of the noun child is children.The plural possessive form is children's.Example: The children's coats hung in a row by the door.
The plural possessive form is the possessive form (ownership or attribute) of a plural noun. When a plural ends in S, the possessive form adds only an apostrophe. When a plural does not end in S, the possessive form uses apostrophe S. Examples: state - plural states - plural possessive states' (The states' governors met in Miami. - governors of more than one state) child - plural children - plural possessive children's (The children's coats were kept in the closet. - coats of more than one child) mouse - plural mice - plural possessive mice's (The mice's tails were caught in the trap. - tails of all the mice)
The possessive form of "the turn of the children" is "the children's turn."
The possessive form of the singular noun child is child's.examples:A child's coat hung by the door.The child's face was smeared with chocolate and a big smile.
Children's
The plural form for the noun child is children.The plural possessive form is children's.Example: The children's coats all hung in a row.
The possessive form is the children's turn.