yes becasue cousins is plural you would do this: cousins'
You can use two possessive nouns in a sentence by making sure the first noun is followed by an apostrophe and 's (e.g. John's) and the second noun is followed by just an apostrophe (e.g. Mary' ) to show ownership. For example, "John's and Mary's cars are parked in the driveway."
It should be ---- Cars are expensive; motorcycles are dangerous.
An apostrophe is used in situations when we refer to something being possessed. With the apostrophe is refers to plurals. For example: John's cars. Those are the cars owned by John. Mens clothes. This is wrong. Men is a plural itself. It should be: Men's clothes. 1950's best song. This is what was the best song in 1950, not in the years from 1950 to 1959. If you have a plural and possessive together, you can use the apostrophe after the s. Farmers' incomes. This refer to the incomes of many farmers.
The only question here would be about forming the possessive. All English nouns form the possessive singular by adding '-s: Jess's place. All English plurals ending in -s form the possessive by adding the apostrophe alone: The Joneses' house.
nouns = jeb, cars verbs = cannot adverbs = like, yet prepositions = but However the correct form of the sentence would be "Jeb likes cars, but can't drive yet"
The word "cars" would have an apostrophe when indicating possession. For example, in the phrase "the cars' engines," the apostrophe shows that the engines belong to the cars. Similarly, "car's" signifies possession for a single car, as in "the car's door."
You can use two possessive nouns in a sentence by making sure the first noun is followed by an apostrophe and 's (e.g. John's) and the second noun is followed by just an apostrophe (e.g. Mary' ) to show ownership. For example, "John's and Mary's cars are parked in the driveway."
Both expressions show possession. The apostrophe before the s indicates singular posession and the apostrophe after the s indicates plural possession. Example: the car's bumper (singular); the cars' bumpers (plural)
The possessive form of the plural noun cars is cars'.The possessive of all plural English nouns ending in -s is formed by adding an apostrophe after the ending -s.
Those cars are called hearses. Those cars are called hearses. Those cars are called hearses. Those cars are called hearses. A hearse.
There is one noun in the sentence, bumper cars, a compound noun.
For plural nouns that end in -s add an apostrophe. - parents' The parents' cars were in the driveway.
cars
Yes, "He sells cars" is correct.
If it is one car - you would use "The car's beams" - If it is more than one car, you would use "The cars beams"
I saw lots of cars drive past.
The past tense of the sentence "They sell cars" is "They sold cars." In this form, the verb "sell" changes to "sold" to indicate that the action occurred in the past.