The singular possessive of the noun child is child's.
Example: The child's mother took him by the hand.
Singular possessive = child's
Plural possessive = children's
no. in order for it to be a correct example of singular possession, it would be "woman's club." "women's club is plural possession
The singular possessive of child is child's.
<improved answer> The singular possessive form of monkey is monkey's. For a singular possession to be shown, you would formulate the sentence to show that the monkey has something (possession) or owns something (possession) by adding an apostrophe after monkey. Example: The monkey's hair was blonde.
The singular possessive noun for child is child's.
Both expressions show possession. The apostrophe before the s indicates singular posession and the apostrophe after the s indicates plural possession. Example: the car's bumper (singular); the cars' bumpers (plural)
No, children is plural; the singular is child.
No, the form child's is the singular possessive form.The plural noun is children.The plural possessive form is children's.The apostrophe indicates possession, that something belongs to that noun. Examples:The children's coats all hung in a row.One child's coat had fallen to the floor.
The noun children is the plural form of the singular noun child.
No, the word children is a plural noun. The singular form is child; the singular possessive is child's.
Child's is singular possessive. Children's is the plural possessive.Examples:A child's coat was left on the school bus.The children's coats were all hung in a row.
The plural for child is children.
The singular possessive is business's. The plural possessive is businesses'.