The possessive form of the plural noun customers is customers'.
Example: Most of the customers' comments were positive.
The possessive form of the plural noun customers is customers'.Example: So far, all of the customers' comments have been positive.
The possessive singular noun for customer is customer's, e.g. "Can you please take care of that customer's request?" The possessive plural noun for customers is customers' , e.g. "Someone needs to tend to those customers' needs as quickly as possible."
The plural form of the noun customer is customers.The plural possessive form is customers'.Example: Based on customers' comments, the new chef is a success.
No, the word customers is a plural noun, the plural form of the noun customer.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.The noun customers is a word for people.A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.The possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.Example:A number of customers complained about the lighting. The problem with the lights is theirs not mine. (theirs=the problem of the customers)
The plural form of the noun customer is customers.The plural possessive form is customers'.Example: Most of the customers' comments were positive.
The possessive form for the plural noun wives is wives'.
The apostrophe is part of the plural possessive noun so it goes first and the comma merely denotes a pause between words.
The plural possessive noun of molecules is molecules' .
The plural form for the noun buzz is buzzes; the plural possessive form is buzzes'.
The plural possessive noun for "vowel" is "vowels'".
The noun 'punctuation' is a mass noun (also called an uncountable noun), it has no plural form.The noun 'punctuation' is a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements.
The word sisters is the plural form; the plural possessive is sisters'.