Nurses is the plural of nurse.
Nurses' is the possessive form of nurse.
The nurses' uniforms were washed by the laundry service.
The word nurse is singular.The plural would be nurses.An example sentence for the singular is: she wants to be a nurse when she is older.An example sentence for the plural is: the nurses rushed to his aid.
As a plural, for more than one dad; no, does not need an apostrophe. As a possessive, as in the item belonging to dad, then yes, it does need an apostrophe.
The Putnams did not like the nurses because they were black and the Putnams are racist.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
Nurses is the plural form. The plural possessive is nurses'.
The plural form for the noun nurse is nurses.
The nurses' uniforms were washed by the laundry service.
Nurse is the singular form of the plural noun nurses.
The word nurse is singular.The plural would be nurses.An example sentence for the singular is: she wants to be a nurse when she is older.An example sentence for the plural is: the nurses rushed to his aid.
The nurses came rushing into the room when they heard the man calling for help.
The singular form for the noun is nurse, the singularpossessive is nurse's.The plural form for the noun is nurses, the pluralpossessive is nurses'.
The noun 'nursing' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb to nurse that functions as a noun. A gerund is an uncountable noun with no plural form. The possessive form is nursing's. Example:Marcy loves her job, but nursing's rewards are not monetary.
The following is written by and according to the U.S. Department of Labor and particular nursing specialties. Some specialties in nursing are as follows. Ambulatory care nurses Critical care nurses Emergency, or trauma, nurses Transport nurses Holistic nurses Hospice and palliative care nurses Infusion nurses Long- term care nurses Medical-surgical nurses Occupational health nurses Perianesthesia nurses Perioperative nurses Psychiatric-mental health nurses Radiology nurses Transplant nurses Intellectual and developmental disabilities nurses Diabetes management nurses HIV/AIDS nurses Oncology nurses Wound, ostomy, and continence nurses Cardiovascular nurses Dermatology nurses Gastroenterology nurses Gynecology nurses Nephrology nurses Neuroscience nurses Ophthalmic nurses Orthopedic nurses Otorhinolaryngology nurses Respiratory nurses Urology nurses neonatal nurses Nurse practitioners (minimum requirement of a master's degree) Forensics nurses Infection control nurses Nurse administrators Legal nurse Nurse informaticists
The possessive form for "nurse" is "nurse's." So if you're talking about the stethoscope belonging to a nurse, you'd say "the nurse's stethoscope." Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
The following is written by and according to the U.S. Department of Labor and particular nursing specialties. Some specialties in nursing are as follows. Ambulatory care nurses Critical care nurses Emergency, or trauma, nurses Transport nurses Holistic nurses Hospice and palliative care nurses Infusion nurses Long- term care nurses Medical-surgical nurses Occupational health nurses Perianesthesia nurses Perioperative nurses Psychiatric-mental health nurses Radiology nurses Transplant nurses Intellectual and developmental disabilities nurses Diabetes management nurses HIV/AIDS nurses Oncology nurses Wound, ostomy, and continence nurses Cardiovascular nurses Dermatology nurses Gastroenterology nurses Gynecology nurses Nephrology nurses Neuroscience nurses Ophthalmic nurses Orthopedic nurses Otorhinolaryngology nurses Respiratory nurses Urology nurses neonatal nurses Nurse practitioners (minimum requirement of a master's degree) Forensics nurses Infection control nurses Nurse administrators Legal nurse Nurse informaticists
As a plural, for more than one dad; no, does not need an apostrophe. As a possessive, as in the item belonging to dad, then yes, it does need an apostrophe.