The plural of appointment is appointments.
That depends on who has the appointment, for example:I have an appointment.You have an appointment. (singular)He has an appointment. (the third person, singular uses the verb 'has')It has an appointment. (the car, perhaps)We have an appointment.You have an appointment. (plural)They have an appointment.
The word appointment is a noun. The plural form is appointments.
We have a doctor's appointment tomorrow.I will make you an appointment to see Mr Crawley.
another word for appointment is meeting
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
That depends on who has the appointment, for example:I have an appointment.You have an appointment. (singular)He has an appointment. (the third person, singular uses the verb 'has')It has an appointment. (the car, perhaps)We have an appointment.You have an appointment. (plural)They have an appointment.
The word appointment is a noun. The plural form is appointments.
Yes the word appointment is a noun. The plural form would be appointments.
Yes the word appointment is a noun. The plural form would be appointments.
The plural form for the noun woman is women.The plural possessive is women's.example: I've made an appointment with the women's representative.
The plural form for the singular noun secretary is secretaries.The plural possessive form is secretaries'.example: The secretaries' jobs are by political appointment.
The plural form of the noun woman is women.The plural possessive form is women's.Example: The women's locker room is on your right. (the locker room designated for women)
There are two accepted forms for possessive singular nouns that end with an s:Add an apostrophe (') after the existing s at the end of the word:Jones'Add an apostrophe s ('s) after the existing s at the end of the word: Jones'sExamples:Mr. Jones' assistant will make an appointment for you.Mr. Jones's assistant will make an appointment for you.
We have a doctor's appointment tomorrow.I will make you an appointment to see Mr Crawley.
Yes, the noun client's is the singular possessive form of the noun client as indicated by the apostrophe s ('s) at the end of the word. The possessive form indicates that something in the sentence belongs to a client.Example: I stopped by the client's house to get a signature on the contract.
Appointment of Governor
The Appointment was created on 1969-07-18.