The possessive form is "the child's crying".
The possessive is formed by adding the apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the noun child.
The possessive phrase would be "the teacher's book."
The possessive form is the kitten's personality.
he would is a pronoun + an auxiliary verb. As a verb cannot have case, you cannot make this phrase possessive. *his would is nonsensical. The closest you could get to a "possessive" is to find the noun root of would which is will. You could say his will. But its hardly the possessive equivalent
The word child's is the possessive form of the singular noun child.example: The child's coat hung beside the door.
The apostrophe spelling he's is a contraction of the phrase "he is."The possessive pronoun for "he" would be his.
The possessive noun phrase is: women's blouses.When a plural noun (women) does not end with an s, an apostrophe s ('s) is added to that noun just like a singular noun to form the possessive.
The noun phrase 'group of children' is singular, one group.The noun 'children' is the plural form of the singular noun 'child'.The noun phrase 'group of children' is a term form one group of two or more children.
The plural is students and the plural possessive is students' (add apostrophe only).
No, "monkey" itself is not a possessive noun; it is a common noun that refers to a type of animal. A possessive noun would typically indicate ownership, such as "monkey's," which shows that something belongs to a monkey. For example, in the phrase "the monkey's banana," "monkey's" is the possessive form.
"The shoes of the horse" is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase; the phrase has no verb. There is no possessive noun is the phrase. The possessive form for the phrase is: "The horse'sshoes...".
pizza's
The phrase would be "misses being there" (wherever) because their is a plural possessive pronoun, the possessive form of they.Examples:The boys didn't go there.I found their caps on the hatrack.