No, the form "friend's" is an incorrect form in the example sentence.
The correct form is: My friends like to play Basketball.
The use of the noun "friends" is the plural form of the noun "friend".
The use of the noun "friends" is not showing possession for anything in the sentence.
The form "friend's" is the singular possessive form, something in the sentence belongs to a friend.
The possessive form of the singular noun 'witch' is witch's.Example: This tea tastes like a witch's brew.
The possessive form of the singular noun hour is hour's.example: One hour's wait seemed like an eternity.
The singular form for the noun hours is hour; the singular possessive form is hour's.There are times that an hour's duration can seem like an eternity.
No, the noun creatures' is the possessive form of the plural noun creatures.The singular possessive form is creature's.
The possessive noun Carlos's is the singular possessive form.The plural form of the noun Carlos is Carloses.The plural possessive form is Carloses'.Examples:I like Carlos's new bicycle.The Carloses' children are twins.
The word men is the plural form of the singular noun man.The possessive form of the singular noun man is man's.Examples:The man's hat blew into the street. (the hat of the man, singular)You'll find men's hats on the second floor. (the hats for men, plural)
The plural form of the noun butterfly is butterflies.The possessive form of the plural noun butterflies is butterflies'.Example: The butterflies' wings were brightly colored.
The possessive form of the singular, proper noun Avery is Avery's.example: We're on our way to Avery's house.
The possessive form of the singular noun butterfly is butterfly's.Example: A viceroy butterfly's wings look much like a monarch butterfly's wings.The singular possessive form of butterfly might seem tricky, because it sounds just like butterflies, but when it's singular, you just add an apostrophe and an S.Singular: The butterfly's wings were brightly colored.Plural: The butterflies' wings were brightly colored.
A singular possessive noun shows ownership or relationship to one person or thing. It is formed by adding an apostrophe followed by the letter "s" ('s) to the singular noun. For example, "the dog's bone" or "Sara's book."
A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.The singular possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, his, hers, its.Examples:Your bicycle is just like mine.Which of these coats is yours?Jack lives on this street. The yellow house is his.
Commander-in-chief is a single, compound word, not three separate words. Like all English nouns, it forms the possessive singular by adding -'s: Commander-in-chief's