Nieces' is the plural possessive form.
The correct plural possessive of nieces is nieces'.
The plural form for the noun niece is nieces; the plural possessive form is nieces'.Example: The kids had a lot of fun at my nieces' party.
The word 'which' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'which' is a relative pronoun or an interrogative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.Adjectives do not have a possessive form.
Nuestra is the possessive pronoun.
There is no personal pronoun in the example sentence.There is no possessive pronoun in the example sentence.The pronoun in the sentence is her, a possessive adjective.The difference between a possessive pronoun and a possessive adjective is:a possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun for something that belongs to someone or something;a possessive adjective takes the place of a noun and comes just before a noun to describe that noun.Examples:Ms. Kowalski signed her autograph on this theater program.The autograph on this program is hers. (possessive pronoun)
The correct plural possessive of nieces is nieces'.
The form niece's is the singular possessive form.Example : "I went to my niece's party."The plural noun is nieces; the plural possessive form is nieces'.
The sentence "You have three nieces" is plural because it refers to multiple nieces. The word "nieces" is plural because it indicates more than one niece. There is no possessive form indicated in this sentence.
Nieces' is the plural possessive form of the noun niece. The singular possessive form would be niece's.
Niece's is a singular possessive noun. niece - singular nieces - plural niece's - singular possessive nieces' - plural possessive
The plural form for the noun niece is nieces; the plural possessive form is nieces'.Example: The kids had a lot of fun at my nieces' party.
The possessive pronoun for the term possessive pronoun is its. Example:A possessive pronoun is useful because itsfunction is to show that a noun in a sentence belongs to something.
The word 'which' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'which' is a relative pronoun or an interrogative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.Adjectives do not have a possessive form.
The possessive pronoun is its (no apostrophe).
No, it has no possessive pronoun but its is a possessive determiner.The dog has lost its bone.
The pronoun to replace the possessive noun "Alan Foster's" is the possessive pronoun or possessive adjectivehis.Examples:Alan Foster's house is on the corner. (possessive noun)The house on the corner is his. (possessive pronoun)His house is on the corner. (possessive adjective)
The plural of niece is nieces. The possessive form for nieces is nieces'.