The plural of foot is feet. The possessive form of feet would have to be feet's. However, I cannot think of any sentence where I would use that word in that form. (My feet's toes are getting cold.) I just don't like that word. I would rearrange the sentence. (The toes on my feet are getting cold.) Both are correct.
The plural of foot is feet.
As in "your feet smell".
Feet is already plural. It is the plural of foot.
Feet IS the plural, foot is the singular.
Feet
foot.
feet
The plural possessive is dimes'.
The plural is queens. The plural possessive is queens'.
The plural possessive form is glasses'.
The singular possessive form for stockholder is stockholder's.
The singular possessive is author's. The plural possessive is authors'.
The irregular plural possessive for foot is feet's.
The plural form for the noun foot is feet; the plural possessive form is feet's.Example: The feet's injuries were minor.
possessive plural word for the bishops: bishops'
No, the noun 'foot' is a singular noun, a word for one body part or the base of something.The plural form is feet, a word for two or more of these body parts or bases of things.The plural possessive form is feet's.A possessive noun indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A noun that does not end with an s forms its possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.A plural noun that does end with s forms its possessive by just adding an apostrophe (') to the end of the word (arms' or legs').Example sentences:He placed his boots at the foot of the stairs. (singular)My foot's injury kept me out of work. (singular possessive)She had her feet massaged and her toenails painted. (plural)The table left its feet's impressions in the carpet. (plural possessive)
The plural possessive is dimes'.
The word sisters is the plural form; the plural possessive is sisters'.
No, the noun 'foot' is a singular noun, a word for one body part or the base of something.The plural form is feet, a word for two or more of these body parts or bases of things.The plural possessive form is feet's.A possessive noun indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A noun that does not end with an s forms its possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.A plural noun that does end with s forms its possessive by just adding an apostrophe (') to the end of the word (arms' or legs').Example sentences:He placed his boots at the foot of the stairs. (singular)My foot's injury kept me out of work. (singular possessive)She had her feet massaged and her toenails painted. (plural)The table left its feet's impressions in the carpet. (plural possessive)
The plural of niece is nieces. The possessive form for nieces is nieces'.
The plural is queens. The plural possessive is queens'.
The plural is stars. The plural possessive is stars'.
The plural is inventories. The plural possessive is inventories'.
The plural possessive form is glasses'.