well army is a collective noun but you could have an army of people or an army of soldiers. Peace I'm out
Er ... the singular form of soldiers is soldier ...
The plural possessive of soldier is soldiers', for example: the soldiers' rations.
Military, Armed Forces, etc.
armies
The form barracks is both the singular and the plural form. The plural possessive is barracks'.The form barrack is a verb, to provide soldiers with accommodations; to jeer loudly at someone performing or speaking in public.
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The plural form is homes; the plural possessive is homes'.
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
The plural possessive is regions'.
The possessive form for the plural noun soldiers is soldiers'.Example: The soldiers' march took them across a river.
The possessive form for the plural noun soldiers is soldiers'.Example: The soldiers' march took them across a river.
soldiers - plural, soldier's - possessive
The plural noun soldiers adds only the apostrophe after the -s for the possessive form: soldiers'
The form barracks is both the singular and the plural form. The plural possessive is barracks'.The form barrack is a verb, to provide soldiers with accommodations; to jeer loudly at someone performing or speaking in public.
Coaster's is singular possessive. The plural is coasters, the plural possessive is coasters'.
The correct form is "its" for the possessive form in the plural. "Its" is used for both the singular and plural possessive forms, without an apostrophe.
The plural is briefs. The plural possessive is briefs'.
The plural is lads. The plural possessive is lads'.
The plural is trollies. The plural possessive is trollies'.
The plural is stations. The plural possessive is stations'.
The plural is relatives. The plural possessive is relatives'.