tell them stop and move over i need space
His. His is a possessive pronoun and Katie's is possessive so you should use his
No. Neither the noun "dad" nor it's possessive form "dad's" should be capitalized. Indeed why should you write the possessive with a capital letter if you don't do so with the ordinary form?
No, there is only one Kansas so it has no plural form. The possessive form for the proper noun Kansas is Kansas's.
some girls have things that you want so you feel the need to be rude to them or want what they have. Some girls wear make up or have long hair and you wish you could be just like them so you become possessive of them.
The possessive form of the pronoun 'who' is whose.Example as interrogative pronoun:Who parked in our driveway?Whose car is in our driveway?Example as relative pronoun:The one who parked in our driveway is the contractor.The one whose car is in the driveway is the contractor.
Hunters is a plural noun, so the possessive form is hunters', for example, "the many hunters' guns".The singular form of hunters is hunter, so if one wanted the possessive noun of hunter, it would be hunter's, as in "that hunter's gun".
He was too possessive so I ended the relationship.The tiger was possessive of her territory.
Like so: "The platypus's natural environment is a pleasant one".
Yes, the plural is candidates. But every candidate has one application, so applications must be plural. A possessive means the person has ownership of something or the item is related to them. So then, candidates (plural) becomes plural possessive: candidates' with apostrophe at the end.
'Who's' is a contraction for 'who is' or 'who has', while 'whose' is a possessive pronoun indicating ownership or relationship. Use 'who's' when you can replace it with 'who is' or 'who has', and use 'whose' to indicate possession or relationship.
An adjective modifies a noun or a pronoun. The possessive adjective its can be used to modify a noun but it is not capitalized unless it is the first word in the sentence. Also, it would be difficult to have a reason to use the possessive adjective to describe another pronoun (its it?, its them?). Some examples using the possessive adjective its:.The puppy wagged its tail.The wind blew so hard that the tree lost itsleaves.Its cover is torn, the book is very old.The possessive pronoun and possessive adjective its should not be confused with it's, the contraction for it is.
The plural of baby is babies, so the plural possessive is babies'.