No, it is not a verb. It is a plural noun, the plural of secretary.
To make the plural noun secretaries possessive, add an apostrophe after the end of the word: secretaries'.Example: The secretaries' reports are due quarterly.
The plural form of the noun secretary is secretaries.The plural possessive form is secretaries'.Example: The secretaries' reports are due quarterly.
"Secretaries" is the plural form. To make it possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "secretaries'," as in "the secretaries' schedules."
The plural form for the singular noun secretary is secretaries.The plural possessive form is secretaries'.example: The secretaries' jobs are by political appointment.
Singular possessive: secretary's Plural: secretaries Plural possessive: secretaries'
The verb is "are", a form of the verb to be.
secetaries is different depending on what sentence but usually it is a noun
This is a phrase, not a sentence. It lacks any sort of verb or predicate to qualify it as a sentence.
Difficult subjects came up and secretaries took notes.
The plural of undersecretary is undersecretaries.
The possessive form of the plural noun secretaries is secretaries'.Example: The secretaries' reports are published quarterly.
To make the plural noun secretaries possessive, add an apostrophe after the end of the word: secretaries'.Example: The secretaries' reports are due quarterly.
The possessive form of the plural noun secretaries of state is secretaries of state's.Example: A row of secretaries of state's photos lined the wall.
The possessive form of the plural noun secretaries is secretaries'. An example of usage is - "the secretaries' notebooks".A singular secretary with one notebook would be "the secretary's notebook".
The plural form of the noun secretary is secretaries.The plural possessive form is secretaries'.Example: The secretaries' reports are due quarterly.
that is correct.. (secretaries' offices)
"Secretaries" is the plural form. To make it possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "secretaries'," as in "the secretaries' schedules."