That is Jimmy's penny.
There are two types of pronouns that show possession:Possessive pronounstake the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.They are: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.EXAMPLESThe house with the green door is mine.The house on the corner is his.John lost his math book, this book must be his.Possessive adjectivestake the place of a possessive noun to describe a noun as belonging to someone or something. A possessive adjective takes the place of a possessive noun.They are: my, your, his, her, their, its, our.EXAMPLESMy house has the green door.His house is on the corner.John lost his math book, this must be his book.
The singular possessive is Maddox's. The plural possessive would only be used if there was a group of people all having the name Maddox, which would be Maddoxes'.
The singular possessive form is evening's. The plural possessive form is evenings'.
The plural possessive form is audiences'.
The plural is Strausses. The plural possessive would be Strausses'.
To write "class" in plural possessive form, you would write "classes'" to indicate that something belongs to multiple classes.
"Country's" is possessive, indicating ownership or relationship to a country. To show that something belongs to or is associated with more than one country, you would use "countries" (plural form).
Apostrophe s. The tomato's skin is still green. The skin belongs to the tomato.
Yes, the word country's is a singular possessive noun. The apostrophe s ('s) at the end of the word indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.Example: The country's official language is English.
No, the word 'cell phone' is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun, a word for a thing.The word 'your' is a possessive adjective, a type of pronoun; a word that is placed before a noun to show that that noun belongs to the person spoken to (you).A possessive noun would be a noun in the possessive form placed before the noun (cell phone) to tell who the phone belongs to; for example, the teacher's cell phone or Jack's cell phone.
The former. The style belongs to the author, and therefore a possessive is required. The one with the apostrophe is the possessive form, assuming that the style belongs to only one author. If there were more than one author with the same style, it would be "authors' style". The one without the apostrophe is gibberish.
Yes, you would add an apostrophe before the "s" to show possession. For example, "Smith's car" indicates that the car belongs to Smith.
To make a possessive form of "child," you would add an apostrophe and an "s" after the word, like this: child's. This indicates that the following noun belongs to the child.
Yes. The race belongs to the mums and dads so a possessive is required. "Mums' and Dads' Race" would be correct.
In the sentence, 'Long ago my grandmother came to America.', there is no possessive noun. The word 'my' is a pronoun called a possessive adjective. A possessive adjective is placed before a noun to show that the noun belongs to a specific person or thing; in this case, belongs to you.A pronoun is not a noun; a pronoun takes the place of a noun (stands in for a noun). If the sentence read, 'Long ago Sam's grandmother came to America.' The noun 'Sam's' would be the possessive noun. The word 'my' is standing in for your name.
Yes, the possessive form of grandparents would be "grandparents' " with an apostrophe after the "s" to show ownership or relationship.
In order for the noun to be possessive, you'd have to formulate the sentence to show that beach owns something/has something that belongs to the beach. Then, you would add an apostrophe [which would show ownership, thus showing possession.] Example: The beach's rocks are jagged.