Look in your language book. It goes before.
The apostrophe in "kids table" is placed after the word "kids", making it "kids' table" to indicate that the table belongs to multiple kids.
kids'party
No, to form the possessive of a plural noun (kids) that ends with an s, just an apostrophe is added to the end of the word (kids').Example: We served the kids' lunches on the picnic table.
always consult a physician before using drugs for kids , they are sensitive to them
If you mean sandwiches for more than one kid/child, it would be kids' (s apostrophe) sandwiches.For one kid: kid's sandwichesFor more than one kid: kids' sandwiches
Yes, kids is a plural noun; the singular form is kid.
No apostrophe. Kids is plural.You can say a person is married with two kids, but it's very informal. Better: the person is married and has two kids.
It would be a kids' playground. There will be more than one kid on the playground, so there are kids. Then to make that plural, you would have to ad only an apostrophe and not apostrophe then an "s". Where as if there were only one kid on the playground then it would be a kid's playground, because there would only be one object there. Hope this helped.
To demonstrate plural possession, make the noun plural first. Then use the apostrophe right away. : sisters' kids
No. Kids is a noun (plural form of kid) and a present tense verb (third person singular conjugation of to kid).
No, the word 'kids' is a countable noun, the plural form for the singular noun 'kid'. A 'mass noun' is another term for non-count noun, a word that has a singular form only or a plural form only.The noun kid (kids) is a word for children or young goats, either of which can be counted.
The word 'kids' is a noun, the plural form for the singular noun 'kid', a word for a child or a young goat; a word for a person or a thing.