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 form of "twin" is "twins'". It's as simple as adding an apostrophe after the "s" when you're talking about something that belongs to more than one twin. So go ahead and show off your grammar skills, smarty pants!
An apostrophe is placed before the "s" to indicate possession for singular nouns (e.g., "the dog's collar"). For plural nouns that already end in "s," the apostrophe is added after the "s" (e.g., "the dogs' park"). For plural nouns that do not end in "s," the apostrophe precedes the "s" (e.g., "the children's toys").
It depends. If the it is plural then it goes at the end like : audiences' If it is singular it goes like this: audience's
With the apostrophe after the final S, the word indicates a plural possessive. "The team of the boys" rather than "the team of the boy".
The word "states" does not require an apostrophe for pluralization. It remains as "states" in its plural form.
Ladies' dresses 'Ladies' is the plural form of 'lady'. The word changes completely in the plural (ie not 'ladys') so the apostrophe must go after the entire word.
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.
Just add an s. Apostrophes do not make words plural, just possessive.
The plural form of the noun song is songs.To form the possessive, place the apostrophe after the ending s: songs'example: Most songs' lyrics can't be posted here due to copyright laws.
The correct form is "The coats belong to the children." There is no need for an apostrophe in this sentence because "children" is a plural noun, not possessive.
"Companies" is the plural "company" and doesn't require an apostrophe unless you are using a plural possessive. With the plural possessive, the apostrophe should appear at the end of the word after the 's'.
Apostrophe s is added to singular possessives. The singer's voice is beautiful.If you want to create a plural possessive, s apostrophe is the correct form. The singers' voices are beautiful.
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The plural possessive is skiers'.If the plural form ends in an 's' then you simply add an apostrophe to make it a plural possessive. If the plural does not end in an 's' then you should add an apostrophe then an 's' to make it possessive.
Client's is the correct spelling for the singular form, e.g. "That is my client's briefcase." Clients' is the correct punctuation for the plural form, e.g. "Those are my clients' briefcases."
visitors---If you are using visitors as a plural of visitor, then you don't need an apostrophe.Visitor's (note apostrophe s) is a singular possessive. That is my visitor's luggage.Visitors' (note s apostrophe) is a plural possessive. This is the visitors' lounge.