The sentence should read, "The man stole the ladies' handbags."
Without the apostrophe, the noun ladies is simply the plural form of lady. In this sentence, the possessive form is required because the handbags belong to the ladies.
The singular possessive form is lady's; the plural possessive is ladies'.
The singular form of the noun fairies is fairy.The singular possessive form is fairy's.Example: The fairy's name is Tinkerbell.
The singular possessive is Maddox's. The plural possessive would only be used if there was a group of people all having the name Maddox, which would be Maddoxes'.
i would have to say it is not
Apples' would be the plural possessive form of apple. The singular form would be apple's."The apple's taste was bitter to Snow White."
The singular possessive form is evening's. The plural possessive form is evenings'.
The noun ladies' is the plural possessive form, the club of a number of ladies.A lady's club is the singular possessive, but don't look for one because a club of one lady would be very rare.
Museum is singular. Museum's is singular possessive. Museums is plural. Museums' is plural possessive.
Other's is singular possessive. Others' would be the plural possessive
Volcanoes is plural. The singular would be volcano and the possessive would be volcano's.
The singular form of the noun fairies is fairy.The singular possessive form is fairy's.Example: The fairy's name is Tinkerbell.
The singular possessive is Maddox's. The plural possessive would only be used if there was a group of people all having the name Maddox, which would be Maddoxes'.
No, "catalogs" is not singular possessive. Singular possessive would be "catalog's" with an apostrophe before the "s" at the end.
People's is plural possessive. That is because people is plural, so the 's is added. The singular possessive would be person's.
i would have to say it is not
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 plural of "oasis" is "oases."
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."