The plural possessive for the noun crowd is crowds'.
The possessive form of the noun crowd is crowd's.
Example: The sight fulfilled the crowd's expectations.
Crowd's.
If it shows possession and ends in the letter s.
No, the word "he" is not a possessive adjective. The word "his" would be the word that shows possession. An example sentence: Bobby decided to auction off his baseball card collection. In this sentence many words modify the noun "collection," but the one that shows who owns it (possession) is the word "his."
Possession shows ownership.His bike. Her car. John's salad.
The Genitive Case shows possession or ownership!
Yes It's is a contraction Its is a pronouns possession
Using an apostrophe after the last s in a word shows possession. The snakes' eggs were laid in a nest.
The dog chased its tail. ('Its' shows possession while 'it's' is a contraction for 'it is', as in "It's raining.)
"It's" is a contraction of the words "it is" and should be used in any context where it is appropriate. "Its," on the other hand is a word that shows possession.
Derren Brown is a well known magician that can hypnotize big crowds of people. He uses mind control tricks of this nature as part of his TV shows and live shows.
No, the word "your" does not require an apostrophe. "Your" is a possessive pronoun, while "you're" is a contraction for "you are" that uses an apostrophe.
Yes, the noun 'crowds' is a concrete noun; the plural form of the singular noun 'crowd', a word for a group of physical people.The word 'crowds' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to crowd.
Lyra.