Sisters-in-law is a plural noun referring to more than one sister-in-law.
The possessive form of this plural noun is sisters-in-law's.
A possessive case noun can show ownership.example: I borrowed my brother's car.A possessive case noun can show possession.example: The dog's collar has a tag with his name.A possessive case noun can show origin.example: Have you seen yesterday'snewspaper?A possessive case noun can show purpose.example: There is a children'splayground in the park.
The possessive form of the proper noun Heintz is Heintz's.Example: Mr. Heintz's classroom is down that corridor.
First person singular: my (possessive adjective), mine (possessive pronoun)Second person siingular: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person singular: his, her, its (possessive adjectives), his, hers, its (possessive pronouns)First person plural: our (possessive adjective), ours (possessive pronoun)second person plural: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person plural: their (possessive adjective), theirs (possessive pronoun)
The word "mine" is the possessive case.The possessive adjective (used with nouns) is my. The possessive pronoun (used alone) is mine.
Nominative case is used for the subject of a sentence, objective case for the object of a verb, and possessive case to show ownership or association with someone or something. Nominative case is typically the subject of the sentence, objective case is typically the direct object, and possessive case is showing possession.
Of or pertaining to possession; having or indicating possession., The possessive case., A possessive pronoun, or a word in the possessive case.
woman's, his. A+ fool
The possessive case of resurrection of Christ is Christ's resurrection.
The possessive form of the acronym CARF (Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities) is CARF's.Example: There is no need to change the letters of the acronym in the question to upper case because CARF's official logo is lower case letters.
The pronoun 'your' is the possessive case; a possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun as belonging to you.
The possessive form is: everyone's ideas
The word team's is a possessive noun.The word our is a possessive adjective (a pronoun).(The pronoun us is not in the possessive case.)
For one DVD, use the singular possessive form 'the DVD's case'. For two or more DVDs, use the plural possessive form, 'the DVDs' case'.
Is king’s rights a correct example of the singular possessive case?
The possessive form of the plural noun hours is hours'.
The plural possessive form is mothers-in-law's.
A possessive case noun can show ownership.example: I borrowed my brother's car.A possessive case noun can show possession.example: The dog's collar has a tag with his name.A possessive case noun can show origin.example: Have you seen yesterday'snewspaper?A possessive case noun can show purpose.example: There is a children'splayground in the park.