The possessive form of the singular noun hour is hour's.
Example: After an hour's wait, I called a taxi.
The plural form of the noun hour is hours.
The plural possessive form is hours'.
Example: The beach is four hours' drive from here.
The singular form for the noun hours is hour; the singular possessive form is hour's.There are times that an hour's duration can seem like an eternity.
The possessive form of the singular noun hour is hour's.example: One hour's wait seemed like an eternity.
The possessive form of the noun hour is hour's.Example: One hour's wait seemed like an eternity.
No. Hours is a plural noun. There is an adjective "hourly" that refers to things done by or on the hour. if you use 'hour' singularly, you can form the possessive adjective hour's. To do this with 'hours' you would have to create an adverbial (e.g. three hours) and take the possessive of that (e.g. three hours' time).
hours
Examples of possessive forms for singular and plural units of time:an hour's layover (singular)two hours' layover (plural)a year's assignment (singular)two years' assignment (plural)a moment's fright (singular)two seconds' thought (plural)
The plural form of the singular noun hostess is hostesses.The plural possessive form is hostesses'.example: "The hostesses' wage at the restaurant is $7.40 an hour." (the wage for all the hostesses)
The plural form of the noun hour is hours.The plural possessive form is hours'.Example: They are expected to arrive in three hours' time.
The singular form for the noun hours is hour; the singular possessive form is hour's.There are times that an hour's duration can seem like an eternity.
The possessive form of the singular noun hour is hour's.example: One hour's wait seemed like an eternity.
1. All English nouns form the possessive singular by adding -'s: The fox's lair, James's house. 2. All English nouns form the possessive plural by adding -' after the -s of the plural: The dogs' owners, the Joneses' house. Except 3. All English PLURAL nouns not ending in -s form the possessive like the singular, with 's: Men's clothing, the Children's Hour, the geese's nests
No. However, there is a sound-alike word our.As the possessive pronoun form of we, our could be seen as the opposite of the possessive form of the plural you, which is "your."
The singular possessive form is season's.
Example of singular possessive nouns for time:a moment's timea second's timea minute's timean hour's timea day's timea year's timeExamples of plural possessive nouns for time:a few moments' timea few seconds' timethree minutes' timefour hours' timefive days' timesix years' time
The possessive singular ending of all English nouns is's, regardless of spelling. Singular nouns that end in s take 's in the possessive, for example class: class's and James: James's. Words that end in an s sound gain a syllable in the possessive singular, and for some exalted names this has an awkward sound. For them we use the prepositional construction with of. For example we say the Law of Moses rather than Moses's Law, or the Teaching of Jesus instead of Jesus's Teaching.The possessive plural ending of all English nouns that take s in the plural is the apostrophe ' alone. For example The two cities' leaders agreed on a compromise. This is only for the plurals ending in s. It is incorrect to use the apostrophe alone for the possessive of any singular word ending in s.The possessive plural ending of all English nouns that do not take s in the plural is 's. For example the children's hour or Women's Lib
The second person pronoun 'you' is both singular and plural; for example:John, you are assigned to paint the cabinets. (singular)Frank and Fran, you are assigned to hang the wall paper. (plural)You can all break for an hour lunch around noon. (plural)
The possessive form is anhour's time.