teachers'
There are three possible options for your question. If you are referring to more than one teacher, there is no apostrophe (teachers). If you are referring to an object that belongs to one teacher, the apostrophe is between the r and s (teacher's desk). If you are referring to an object that belongs to more than one teacher, the apostrophe is after the s (teachers' break room).
Depends, if the word "teachers" is a plural noun, and refers to multiple teachers then use an apostrophe. Example: The teachers' club handed out free pencils. If the world "teachers" is singular, and only refers to one teacher, then use an apostrophe like so: My teacher's dress is very red. If you are not referring to possession at all, and nobody is owning anything in the sentence, then put no apostrophe
This is the case when it is the plural possessive form of teacher. This means something belonging to more than one teacher. If something belonged to only one teacher then the apostrophe would appear before the 's'. - "The teacher's diary"
If you're talking about something that belongs to the teacher, then you need the apostrophe. Teacher's desk, teacher's computer, etc. If you're talking about teacher as a plural noun, then you don't need the apostrophe.
The possessive form of the plural noun teachers is teachers'.A possessive noun is placed before a noun to indicate ownership, possession, origin, or purpose of that noun.Example: The meeting is at four in the teachers' lounge.
There are three possible options for your question. If you are referring to more than one teacher, there is no apostrophe (teachers). If you are referring to an object that belongs to one teacher, the apostrophe is between the r and s (teacher's desk). If you are referring to an object that belongs to more than one teacher, the apostrophe is after the s (teachers' break room).
Depends, if the word "teachers" is a plural noun, and refers to multiple teachers then use an apostrophe. Example: The teachers' club handed out free pencils. If the world "teachers" is singular, and only refers to one teacher, then use an apostrophe like so: My teacher's dress is very red. If you are not referring to possession at all, and nobody is owning anything in the sentence, then put no apostrophe
Two teachers with Master's Degrees.
This is the case when it is the plural possessive form of teacher. This means something belonging to more than one teacher. If something belonged to only one teacher then the apostrophe would appear before the 's'. - "The teacher's diary"
It means that the plural noun before the apostrophe has possession of the noun or plural noun that follows it. Example: All the cats' tails were wagging.
If you're talking about something that belongs to the teacher, then you need the apostrophe. Teacher's desk, teacher's computer, etc. If you're talking about teacher as a plural noun, then you don't need the apostrophe.
You need the plural (no apostrophe). Make teachers feel they have a choice.
For singular nouns, you add an apostrophe and then another 's (e.g., "Jess's book"). For plural nouns that already end in 's', you just add an apostrophe (e.g., "the teachers' lounge").
If it was the private lounge for just one teacher, the singular possessive form is "teacher's lounge".If it was the common lounge used by many teachers, the plural possessive form is "teachers' lounge".
The possessive form of the plural noun teachers is teachers'.A possessive noun is placed before a noun to indicate ownership, possession, origin, or purpose of that noun.Example: The meeting is at four in the teachers' lounge.
Assuming that each teacher does not have their own lounge, you've already got it in the right spot. Good on ya.
Teachers is plural, and the trailing apostrophe shows possession (you do not add another S where the plural ends in S).So examples for this plural possessive is:The teachers' union is asking for higher salaries.All of the teachers' cars are parked in the faculty parking lot.