The possessive pronoun form: the diver's shoes.
No, the word "divers" is the plural form of the singular noun "diver".The possessive form of the singular noun "diver" is diver's.The possessive form of the plural noun "divers" is divers'.
The possessive form for the noun miss is miss's.Example: The little miss's shoes were blue to match her dress.
Yes, the noun shoes is plural. The singular form is shoe.
The correct possessive form is King Charles's. Example sentence:King Charles's shoes were pinching his feet.
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
No, the word "divers" is the plural form of the singular noun "diver".The possessive form of the singular noun "diver" is diver's.The possessive form of the plural noun "divers" is divers'.
The plural form of the noun shoe is shoes.The plural possessive form is shoes'.
"The shoes of the horse" is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase; the phrase has no verb. There is no possessive noun is the phrase. The possessive form for the phrase is: "The horse'sshoes...".
The possessive form of the plural noun shoes is shoes'.Examples: These shoes' prices are really high.
The plural form of the noun shoe is shoes.The plural possessive form is shoes'.
The possessive form for the noun miss is miss's.Example: The little miss's shoes were blue to match her dress.
Yes, the noun shoes is plural. The singular form is shoe.
The possessive form of the noun mommy is mommy's.Example: We laughed at the toddler wearing his mommy's shoes.
The correct possessive form is King Charles's. Example sentence:King Charles's shoes were pinching his feet.
The possessive phrase are the man's shoes.
A possessive modifier is a possessive form of noun or pronoun added to another noun to show something other than possession. For example:John's books are in his locker. (the possessive form John's shows that the books belong to John)The dog's bowl is empty. (the possessive form dog's shows that the bowl belongs to the dog)These are examples of possessive nouns.A possessive modifier is a possessive form that shows something else:He ate the lion's share of the cake. (the share he ate didn't belong to a lion; the possessive form lion's means something different, it's a description for 'the largest' share of the cake)I received a volume of Kipling's poems. (The poems were written by Kipling, they don't belong to him)'Children's Shoes on Sale' (oh dear, I hope they're not selling shoes that belong to some children, no, the possessive form is used to say they're selling shoes meant to be worn by children)These are examples of possessive modifiers.
The form girl's is the singular possessive form (belonging to one girl).The form girls' is the plural possessive form (belonging to two or more girls).Examples:A little girl's shoes were sitting by the door. (singular)All of the girls' shoes were lined up in a row. (plural)