The possessive pronoun for the possessive noun cousin's in his or hers, depending on the gender of the cousin. Examples:
My cousin lives on this street. The house on the corner is hers.
My cousin lives on this street. The house on the corner is his.
Note: Don't forget, a possessive pronoun takes the place of the noun that belongs to the cousin. A possessive adjective is placed before the noun to describes that noun (his house, her house).
That is the correct spelling of the noun "cousin" (a relative through siblings).
Jonathan's is singular possessive; if you know two people by this name, the plural is Johnathans; the plural possessive is Jonathans'. Example sentence: My brother and my cousin are both Jonathans; the Jonathans' last names are the same also.
No, cousin is not a proper noun, it is a common noun, a general word for the child of your aunt or your uncle.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place or thing; for example, the movie My Cousin Vinny, Two Cousins' Lobster Shack, or Cousin Lane in London UK.
The word 'we' is a pronoun; we replaces first person, plural subject nouns in a sentence or phrase.
The common noun is cousin.
Cousins is the plural of cousin.
The noun cousin is the singular form. The plural noun is cousins.
The noun cousin is the singular form; the plural noun is cousins.
The plural form of the singular noun cousin is cousins. The plural possessive form is cousins'.example: Should I give matching gifts for my twin cousins' birthday?
That is the correct spelling of the noun "cousin" (a relative through siblings).
favorite cousin is spelled "mon cousin préféré, ma cousine préférée" in French.
cousins cousinns
The word cousin is a noun. No, because verbs are words that show action. run, jump, swim, etc.
Words have plural forms, but sentences don't. It doesn't really mean anything to say, what is the plural form of that sentence. However, the sentence does contain two nouns, sister and cousin, which could be changed to plural nouns, sisters and cousins. It is not necessary to change college, since "in college" does not necessarily mean in a specific college, just in some college.
The word cousin's is the singular possessive of the noun cousin.Example: My cousin's visit was much too short.The plural possessive form is cousins'.Example: Both cousins' birthdays are on the first of the month.
The likely word is "cousin" (a relative, through a parent's siblings).
Jonathan's is singular possessive; if you know two people by this name, the plural is Johnathans; the plural possessive is Jonathans'. Example sentence: My brother and my cousin are both Jonathans; the Jonathans' last names are the same also.