The singular possessive form of the noun agency is agency's.
Example: I will be signing this agency's contract.
The plural form of the noun agency is agencies.
The plural possessive form is agencies'.
Example: I've found that most of the agencies' contracts are similar.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'agent' is agency.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'agent' is agency.
Yes, agencies is a noun, a common noun. The word agencies is the plural form of the noun agency.
Agency's and Agencies are NOT the same thing. Agency's is a possesive noun. It means "an agency is" or something belongs to (an) agency (The agency's client/s). Plural is "many Agencies' clients". The noun, Agencies is the correct plural of Agency.
Yes, Social Security is a proper noun, it is the name of a government agency and a citizens' insurance program.
The noun agency is the singular form.The plural noun is agencies.
Agency is a noun.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'agent' is agency.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'agent' is agency.
Yes, agencies is a noun, a common noun. The word agencies is the plural form of the noun agency.
Agency's and Agencies are NOT the same thing. Agency's is a possesive noun. It means "an agency is" or something belongs to (an) agency (The agency's client/s). Plural is "many Agencies' clients". The noun, Agencies is the correct plural of Agency.
The possessive form of the singular noun agency is agency's.example: This agency's policy has a lower deductible for the same price.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'owner' is ownership.The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'agent' is agency.
It should only be capitalized if it is the full proper title of a company.
Yes, Social Security is a proper noun, it is the name of a government agency and a citizens' insurance program.
No, "agency wide" does not need a hyphen when used as an adverbial phrase. It should be written as "agency wide" when describing something that applies across an entire agency. However, if used as a compound adjective before a noun, it is typically hyphenated as "agency-wide." For example, you would say "an agency-wide policy."
The noun 'detective' is a common noun that is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence. A proper noun is always capitalized. The noun 'detective' is a proper noun when it's a title, as in Detective Jones, or part of the name of an organization, as in Jones Detective Agency.