rabbit's food
The possessive adjective "its" would have the plural "their" or "theirs". Neither uses an apostrophe. Example : "The cat ate its food. The dogs ate their food." Example: "The car was theirs."
A possessive phrase is a group of words that includes a possessive noun or pronoun and the noun that is possessed; for example:the cat's whiskersJane's catmy carmother's carmy mother's carthe sun's brightnessthe orange's peelthe children's playgroundDetroit's mayoryour housetheir houseyour question's answer
The possessive form is 'the cat's tail'.
The possessive phrase would be "the teacher's book."
The reports of students will be due next Friday morning.Change to: The students' reports will be due next Friday morning.
The possessive noun phrase is the fathers' rights.
No.A possessive noun is - noun + ' sThe boy's father went away. The possessive form boy's tells us whose father.The cat's food was gone. The possessive cat'stells us who the food belongs to.
cat's
The possessive noun phrase is the fathers' rights.
There is no possessive noun unless you change the phrase to read, 'the children's telephone'. In this example the possessive noun is children's.
The possessive form is my cat'sveterinarian.
The possessive form is the visitors' lounge.