The plural form of the noun husband is husbands.
The plural possessive form is husbands'.
example: Our husbands' names are Matt and Mike.
The singular possessive form is headdress's. The plural possessive form is headdresses'.
I, me, my, mine, myself we, us, our, ours, ourselves {thou, thee, thy, thine, thyself} you, you (ye), your, yours, yourself he, him, his, his, himself she, her, her, hers, herself it, it, its, its, itself they, them, their, theirs, themselves who, whom, whose, whose, one, one, ones, ones, oneself. This, this, this's, this's These, these, their, theirs Which, which, whiches, whiches That, that, thats, thats Those, those, their, theirs Forms in brackets are archaic.
Yes, it is proper to start a sentence with "he" as long as it is grammatically correct and makes sense within the context of the sentence. Starting a sentence with "he" is common in writing and is often used to introduce a specific person or character.
Thats easy for me to answer. I am one. Here it is: What did the diplomat major in?
it ould be "us" cause thats who the pictures for
The singular possessive form is headdress's. The plural possessive form is headdresses'.
thats his pencil
hey! thats me!
Thats nice
I dont know , thats wjy I asked
i put a lot of petrol in my car . thats a sentence.
u thats it
ew no thats gross
Yes to a amazing husband because thats what she deserves
I'm enthusiastic to search for source of knowledges.
Similitude means... and then just say what it means thats a sentence
why are u oligarchy witch me , said ------. thats how u make it a sentence