The plural of life is lives.
The plural possessive form of lives is lives'
The plural of life is lives (pronounced lihvz).
Specifically, the words "life" and "lives" are nouns.
The word "lives" is also the third person, singular of the verb to "live".
The third person singular of the verb to live is he/she/it lives (rhyming with gives); the third person plural is they live (also rhyming with give).
Interesting, because lives (rhyming with dives) is also the plural form of the noun life (rhyming with wife). So by asking for the plural, you were making it clear that you are talking about the verb.
The plural of life is lives.
The plural possessive form of lives is lives'
The possessive form of the singular noun life is life's.
example: These volumes represent his life's work.
The plural form of the noun life is lives.
Life is singular
Lives is plural
The possessive form of the noun life is life's.
Example: My life's goal is to visit as many countries as possible.
The possessive form of the singular noun life is life's.example: These volumes represent his life's work.
The singular possessive form of "lives" is "live's."
There is no word in English spelled lifes.The plural form of the singular noun life is lives.The possessive form of the singular noun life is life's.
Ben Franklin is a proper noun, a singular noun. Ben Franklin is not a possessive noun. The possessive form is Ben Franklin's. Example sentence:Ben Franklin's life was long and interesting.
'Life's gift' should indeed have an apostrophe, as the gift is belonging to life (possessive pronoun), as it were.
The singular possessive form of "person" is "person's." The possessive plural would either be "persons' " or "people's."Example:Each person's responsibility is to be a good steward of their own life and to obey the laws.
The possessive form for the noun loafer is loafer's.Examples:A loafer's life lacks much accomplishment.The dog took of with the loafer's mate.
The possessive form of the proper noun Benjamin Franklin is Benjamin Franklin's.Example: Benjamin Franklin's life was long and interesting.
The singular possessive form of "person" is "person's." The possessive plural would either be "persons' " or "people's."Example:Each person's responsibility is to be a good steward of their own life and to obey the laws.
A son's pride in his father can inspire him all his life.
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."
There is no contraction in the given sentence.The noun Davies should be possessive but it has no apostrophe to indicate possession.The correct possessive form for the singular noun Davies is:Davies' or Davies's (both are accepted as correct)Examples:Davies' life lasted eighty-two years from 1913 to 1995.Davies's life lasted eighty-two years from 1913 to 1995.