The singular possessive form is: Mr. Harris's house is number twelve.
The plural possessive form is: The Harrises' house is number twelve.
i thank it is a plural
Thank you, thank you for asking about this pet peeve. "I am proud of my girls" is correct. You make most ordinary nouns plural by simply adding the letter s. Apostrophe s after a noun is a possessive form. For example, you would say "I am proud of my girl's athletic achievements". You are talking about the achievements that 'belong to' your girl.
It is a Japanese word and it means thank you.
Sure, please provide the plural noun you would like me to give the singular form for.
Example sentence with a name in direct address (Mr. Campbell) and a possessive noun (Nancy's):Mr. Campbell, thank you for fixing Nancy's bicycle.
To correct the plural possessive nouns, an apostrophe must be added to the ending -s of committees (committees') and residents (residents').The plural, possessive noun faculties' is the correct form.A comma should be placed after the first two of the three plural possessive nouns.Also, the possessive adjective your is extraneous; the article the is the modifier used for all three of the plural possessive nouns.The correct sentence is, "Thank you so much again for all of the committees', the faculties', and the residents' consideration."If the possessive adjective your is used, the article the should not be used before each of the plural possessive nouns. The sentence would read, "Thank you so much again for all of your committees', faculties', and residents' consideration."
The plural of the noun "thank-you" is thank-yous.
When you 'thank' someone, you use the second person possessive adjective 'your':Thank you for your contribution.Thanks for your contribution.For business purposes, spell out the 'thank you'. The word 'thanks' is more appropriate for informal writing or said in person.
i thank it is a plural
The hyphenated plural spelling "thank-yous" is usually recommended.
Thank you, thank you for asking about this pet peeve. "I am proud of my girls" is correct. You make most ordinary nouns plural by simply adding the letter s. Apostrophe s after a noun is a possessive form. For example, you would say "I am proud of my girl's athletic achievements". You are talking about the achievements that 'belong to' your girl.
"Thank you" in Scotland is typically said as "thank you" in English, or in the local Scottish Gaelic dialect as "tapadh leat" for singular or "tapadh leibh" for plural.
Ciara's Whole Name Is Ciara Princess Harris
Thank you. And Muchos Gracias means "Thank you very much."
"Many thanks" is an English equivalent of "molte grazie."Specifically, the feminine plural adjective "molte" means "many, a lot." The feminine plural noun "grazie" means "charms, thanks." Its plural definite article is "le" ("the"). Its plural indefinite article is "delle" ("some").The pronunciation is "MOHL-teh GRAH-tsyeh."
ciara doesn't have a husband i thank she still like bow wow
It is a Japanese word and it means thank you.