they had games and dolls, not like the game's and doll's we have today though.
The collective noun for toys is an assembly of toys.
I assume it is the babies who own (or possess) the toys, so the plural would be: babies' toys. In other words, the toys don't own anything or possess anything; the toys belong to the babies. You only use the apostrophe when showing whose toys you are talking about. So, for example: the baby's toys (only one baby, with a bunch of toys); the babies' toys (more than one baby with a bunch of toys).Or, if you are referring to something of the toys of babies; for example the babies' toys' price or the babies' toys' department. Both the toys and the babies must show possession (the toys of the babies, the price of the toys).
The R means "are" ... Toys Are Us.
Yes, if you are talking about more than one baby:The babies' toys are educational.No, if you are talking about one baby:The baby's toys are educational.
no.
a woman encient?
Avi bunny
we can learn that they toys weren't advanced like the toys us children have now a day
Building blocks
with clay that they syhaped that was from the ground then they pantied them
They were buried with all their belongings.
Yes they have toys like wooden boats and clay toy animals and dolls stuffed with rags and papyrus
All the spells used were selected from a sacred book called the Book of the Dead.
There were various toys that Ancient Egyptian children had. They were wooden crocodiles, spinning tops, wooden dolls, papyrus balls and board games. Some examples have been discovered in tombs, but we have to be careful as they may not have been toys in some cases, but things they made to accompany them to the afterlife.
Because they believed that after they died, they would still be walking around and the Egyptians give them something to play with.
Because they believed that after they died, they would still be walking around and the Egyptians give them something to play with.
wos the king of encient of babiloan in ogaden region