To form the possessive for the plural noun mothers, place an apostorphe after the ending s: mothers'.
Example: We do have several fathers on our mothers' committee.
The plural is composers and the plural possessive form is composers' (just an apostrophe added).
The plural of governor is governors (no apostrophe necessary). The plural possessive form of governor is governors'.
The possessive is the standard form - playmate's - and the possessive of the plural can use only the apostrophe - playmates' - in accordance with standard usage.
The plural possessive is charges'. When the plural form ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe to make it possessive.
The plural possessive form of "Lois" is "Loises'." This is because "Lois" is a plural noun, so to indicate possession by multiple Lois entities, you add an apostrophe after the plural form "Loises." The apostrophe comes after the "s" because the plural form already ends in "es."
No. Plural possessive is "their" Possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe.
The plural is schools. The plural possessive form is schools' (apostrophe only).
The plural form for the noun mother is mothers. The plural possessive form is mothers'.Example: The mothers of several students have formed a mothers' committee.
The plural is schools. The plural possessive form is schools' (apostrophe only).
The word its is the possessive. It is singular and does not require an apostrophe when it's possessive. The plural form is their.
The plural possessive form is possessives'.The possessives' forms are recognized by the apostrophe -s or the -s apostrophe at the end of the word.
The plural is composers and the plural possessive form is composers' (just an apostrophe added).
The plural of wife is wives.The plural possessive form of wives is wives'(apostrophe after the S).The singular possessive form is wife's.
The possessive form of the plural noun mothers is mothers'.Example: The mothers' committee has raised the funds for the playground.
The plural of governor is governors (no apostrophe necessary). The plural possessive form of governor is governors'.
The plural of address is addresses and the plural possessive is addresses' (apostrophe only).
The plural possessive form is mothers-in-law's.