No, the noun creatures' is the possessive form of the plural noun creatures.The singular possessive form is creature's.
The possessive form of zoo is zoo's.
Yes. Deer's is both singular possessive and plural possessive, because the word "deer" is both singular and possessive.An example of the singular possessive would be "That deer's fawn was lucky to escape the wolves."An example of the plural possessive would be "Those deer's fawns were all lucky to escape the wolves."
The singular noun is octopus.There are two accepted forms for possessive singular nouns ending in s:Add an apostrophe (') after the existing s at the end of the word: octopus'Add an apostrophe s ('s) after the existing s at the end of the word: octopus's
The plural form of the noun zoo is zoos.The plural possessive form is zoos'.example: The USDA is responsible for all zoos' compliance with The Animal Welfare Act.
The word zoo's is the singular possessive (refers to one zoo).The plural is zoos and the plural possessive is zoos' (e.g. The zoos' directors agreed to merge them into a single state corporation.)
zoo's
Taco's is the singular possessive.
The word zoo's is the possessive form of the singular noun zoo.The plural noun is zoos.The plural possessive form is zoos'.Example: Many zoos' habitats have improved over the past decade.
President's is the singular possessive form.
The singular possessive to the word baby is baby's.
Dime's is the singular possessive of dime.
The singular possessive is author's. The plural possessive is authors'.
No, "brother's" is a possessive form for singular nouns. It indicates that something belongs to one brother.
No, the word children is a plural noun. The singular form is child; the singular possessive is child's.
There is no singular possessive of "actresses". The word itself is plural. The singular possessive of actress, however is "actress's."
The singular possessive form is grotto's.