The possessive form is the children's turn.
The possessive form of "the turn of the children" is "the children's turn."
The possessive form is the children's turn.
Children's
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)
No, the word children is a plural noun. The singular form is child; the singular possessive is child's.
The plural form for the noun child is children; the plural possessive form is children's.
The possessive form of "children" is "children's." Sentence example: The children's toys were scattered across the floor.
The possessive form is 'the children's song'.
Whose is the possessive form of who. It means "belonging to whom." Who's is also a possessive form of who, but it is a contraction of "who is".The correct form is: Whose turn is it?
Possessive for children = children's
children's