The possessive form for 'careers of women' is women's careers.
Example: When I entered the workforce, women's careers were limited.
The plural possessive form is possessives'.The possessives' forms are recognized by the apostrophe -s or the -s apostrophe at the end of the word.
The singular possessive is dish's; the plural possessive is dishes'.
James' pencil---The correct answer is James's pencil.Apostrophe s for singular possessives, s apostrophe for plural possessives.
Careers is the plural of career.
No. The plural form is businesses. Apostrophes make possessives, not plurals.
The noun women is the plural form of the singular noun woman.Example: Two women ran to assist the woman who had fallen.The possessive form of the singular noun woman is woman's.Example: The woman's name is Lucy.The possessive form of the plural noun women is women's.Example: The women's names are Lucy and Ethel.
The plural possessive of woman is women's.Normally the plural possessive in English is formed by adding s' (s + apostrophe) to the noun, but plurals that do not end in s, like men, women, children and oxen, simply add 's(apostrophe + s), just like singular possessives. Thus you have dogs' collars and priests' vestments, but women's magazines and children's toys.
The plural form for the noun pupil is pupils.The plural possessive form is pupils'.Example: Some of our pupils' essays were published in the school newsletter.
Careers
These are: Mi (my), mío (mine), su (your), suyo (yours), tu (your - familiar), tuyo (yours - familiar), nuestro/a (our), vuestro (your - plural familiar), su (your plural), suyo (yours plural).
The singular is "princess" and the plural is "princesses." The possessives are princess's and princesses' (apostrophe only for most plurals).
No, it is not. Employees is a plural noun (plural of employee, a person working for an employer).(*The possessives employee's or employees' can act like adjectives.)