The possessive form of the singular noun chief is chief's.
example: The chief's helmet was covered with ice.
The possessive form of the singular noun chief is chief's.Example: Our chief's name is Walters.
The possessive form of the singular noun chief is chief's.The plural form of the noun chief is chiefs.The plural possessive form is chiefs'.Example: Our chief's membership in the Chiefs' Union keeps us up to date on modern techniques and best practices.
The possessive form is editor-in-chief's.Example: Send this to the editor-in-chief's desk.
No, the correct plural possessive form for the plural noun editors-in-chief iseditors-in-chief's.example: The editors-in-chief's committee has approved my investigative series.
The singular possessive form of "commander in chief" is "commander in chief's." This form indicates ownership or association, such as in the phrase "the commander in chief's decision."
The plural possessive is commanders in chief's.
The plural form of the compound noun editor-in-chief is editors-in-chief.The correct plural possessive form is editors-in-chief's.
The plural form of the noun chief is chiefs.The plural possessive form is chiefs'.Example: All of the chiefs' budgets are due at the end of the month.
None are. (see the related questions below)The plural possessive of editor is editors' but it cannot take a possessive in the combined form "editor in chief" -- the plural possessive is editors in chief's.
Chiefs of
The plural form of the compound noun editor-in-chief is editors-in-chief.The correct plural possessive form is editors-in-chief's.
Commander-in-chief is a single, compound word, not three separate words. Like all English nouns, it forms the possessive singular by adding -'s: Commander-in-chief's