The possessive form of the plural noun families is families'.
Example: Many families' efforts helped to build the playground.
The plural form of the noun family is families. The plural possessive form is families'.example: All of the families' houses on this street are displaying the flag.
The plural form of the noun family is families. The plural possessive form is families'.example: All of the families' houses on this street are displaying the flag.
No, the word 'families' is the plural form of the noun family.Example: There are two new families on our block.The singular possessive form of the noun family is family's.Example: My family's dog is a border collie.The plural possessive form is families'.Example: The block party was a success thanks to all of the families' participation.
The possessive form of families is families'.This is because the possessor is families, a plural. The apostrophe of possession goes after the possessor, hence families'.
The word family forms a normal possessive family's(apostrophe S added to group noun).The plural possessive is families' (apostrophe added to the plural)Examples:That is the family's picture.All of the families' homes were destroyed by the storm.
The possessive form for the plural noun families is families'.Example: The families' picnic turned out to be a lot of fun and each family brought something good to eat.
The singular form for the noun families is family. The singular possessive form is family's.
No, the word familys is not a word, the correct plural form of the noun family is families.The possessive form of the singular noun is family's (our family's dog).
Plural method: My families. Your families Possessive Method: My family's and Your family's Other: Their family, their families, and possessive version of Their Family's
The answer is families.
The word families is a plural noun that can be the subject or object in a sentence:Three families attended the picnic. (subject)Letters were delivered to all families in the building.(object)The word families' (with an apostrophe) is the possessive form of the same plural noun. It means "belonging to more than one family"; e.g.Researchers looked at five families' histories. (they looked at the histories of five families)The rule for forming plurals and possessives when an English word takes an "s" is a bit strange but it's consistent:The singular possessive form puts an apostrophe betweenthe word and the plural "s"; for example, > ... the dog's collar (one dog has a collar)The plural possessive form puts the apostrophe after the plural "s": > ... the dogs' collars (more than one dog has collars)
RULEplural noun + apostrophe (')e.g. parent (singular)parents (plural)parents' (plural possessive)Families is already plural. It is the plural of family.The possessive of family is family's as in: 'Our family's annual get-together last year was in Disneyland, Orlando.'The possessive of families is families' . 'Unfortunately many families' holidays were ruined by the bad weather.'