The possessive form for the plural noun dancers is dancers'.
The plural form of the noun dancer is dancers.
The plural possessive form is dancers'.
Example: The dancers' costumes were very colorful.
The possessive form for the singular noun dancer is dancer's.
Example: The dancer's performance brought the house down.
No the word dancers is a plural noun.
The singular noun is dancer.
Dancer's and dancers'.
The dancer's leotard was black.
You are dancers.
dancers
dance
dancer's
Dancer's
The plural possessive form is the dancers' hips.
The plural form of the noun headdress is headdresses. The plural possessive form is headdresses'. Example: The dancers have to rehearse in costume because of their headdresses' weight.
The plural form of the noun headdress is headdresses.The plural possessive form is headdresses'.Example: The dancers rehearsed moving gracefully under their headdresses' weight.
singular: dancer singular possessive: dancer's plural: dancers plural possessive: dancers'
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The possessive form is subsidiary's.
The possessive form of "synopsis" is "synopsis's" or "synopsis'."
No, it is singular, the possessive form of it is its. The plural form of it is they or them, and the possessive form is their.To answer the question directly: there is no such word as ITS'.
The singular possessive is Richard's; the plural possessive is Richards'.
The possessive form is battleship's.
Bicyclist's is the possessive form.
The possessive form is librarian's.