The singular possessive is dish's; the plural possessive is dishes'.
The noun 'dish' is the singular noun. The plural form is 'dishes'.
James' pencil---The correct answer is James's pencil.Apostrophe s for singular possessives, s apostrophe for plural possessives.
The singular is "princess" and the plural is "princesses." The possessives are princess's and princesses' (apostrophe only for most plurals).
The possessive form of the noun dish is dish's.Example: The dish's rim is chipped.
The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding-'s: actress's. The use of an apostrophe alone is reserved for PLURAL possessives.
There is no apostrophe at the end of the word mistress. An apostrophe goes at the end of PLURAL possessives ending in -s, not singular ones. The possessive singular of mistress is mistress's, and the plural possessive is mistresses'.
'You' can be (singular) 'tu' or 'usted' (plural) 'vosotros/as' or 'ustedes' The first and third examples are informal; second and fourth, formal. Their corresponding possessives ('your') are: 'tu' (singular) 'tus' (plural) 'su' (singular) 'sus' (plural) 'vuestro/a' (singular, male/female) 'vuestros/as' (plural, male/female) 'su' (singular) 'sus' (plural) NB that the singular and plural, male/female, relate to the relevant noun. If you mean (erroneously) 'you're' = 'you are', I suggest you ask the question again
Dishes is a noun (plural form of dish) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of dish).
Yes, dishes is the plural form of the singular noun dish.
The plural possessive form is possessives'.The possessives' forms are recognized by the apostrophe -s or the -s apostrophe at the end of the word.
That is the correct spelling (despite the ungainly three S form) of princess's (of or belonging to a single princess).The similar nouns and their possessives are :princess (singular noun)princess'sprincesses (plural noun)princesses'prince (singular noun, male)prince'sprinces (plural noun, male)princes'
The singular possessive of dish is dish's