gentle communion cotton, flannel nightgowns , wedding organdies, and dime store velvets.
PIE
No, is the one-word answer. Most people don't worry about a man's matrilineage.... but the line of mothers (or matrilineage) to which a man would be most closely connected would be his own mother's line of mothers rather than his wife's line of mothers. Their daughter's line of course is his wife's line. Think about it. (Hint: Their daughter belongs to her own mother's line of mothers or matrilineage). So the one-sentence answer is, no, a man belongs to his mother's matrilineage, his mother's line of mothers.
Angels traditionally do not have mothers and fathers
Mughal Emperor Shahjahan mother is Manmathi
Wayne Brady's mothers name is Linda Newton
No, not the same. Mother's Day is every mother's festival which we should remember to treat our mother well. Mothers' Day means nothing.
No, not the same. Mother's Day is every mother's festival which we should remember to treat our mother well. Mothers' Day means nothing.
Remember that apostrophes are used to make a word possessive, not a plural. "Mother's" would mean "belonging to Mother".
The "mother country" is whatever country the speaker's ancestors came from. In British Commonwealth countries, or former British colonies, the mother country is England.
If mother is singular: mother's If mother is plural: mothers'
Mothers is more than one mother. Mother's is something that belongs to a mother. "The mothers group is meeting Tuesday." "My mother's car is in the shop."
Sarah
You use mothers for two and not mother's
The plural is mothers-in-law. (not mother-in-laws)
The possessive form for the plural noun mothers is mothers'.Example: The mothers of several students have formed a mothers' committee.
The difference is the placement of the apostrophe. "Mother's" with an apostrophe before the "s" is possessive, indicating something belonging to one mother, whereas "mothers'" with an apostrophe after the "s" is possessive, indicating something belonging to multiple mothers.
The plural of the noun mother (female parent) is mothers.