Possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe -s ('s) to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe (') to plural nouns that already end with -s.
Forming a plural possessive noun is dependent on whether the plural noun ends with an -s or does not.
Example plural possessive nouns:
the covers of the books = the books' covers
the assembly of classes = the classes' assembly
the coats of the children = the children's coats
shoes for men = men's shoes
the houses of the neighbors = the neighbors' houses
The word 'what' does not have a possessive form.The word 'what' is not a noun.The word 'what' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'what' is a interrogative or a relative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.The adjective 'what' is a word used to describe a noun.
To change a singular possessive noun to a plural possessive noun, first you must change the noun from a singular noun to a plural noun. The reason for this is that plural nouns can take different forms which will determine how the plural possessive is formed. Examples:A plural noun that ends with the letter s, just add an apostrophe after the ending s (s').singular noun, boy; plural noun, boys; plural possessive boys'An irregular plural noun that does not end with s, add anapostrophes ('s) to the end of the word.singular noun, child; plural noun, children; plural possessive children's
You form the possessive of a noun by adding an apostrophe and an s. You can frequently do the same thing by using the preposition of. That can clarify the situation when you could confuse possessive and plural or cause some other type of confusion.
Usually, you add 's (for singular possessive) and s' for plural possessive.
To make the plural noun "days" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: days'
'es is not used to make the word fox into a singular possessive noun, rather you should add 's to fox to do so. If you add the suffix -es to fox, it would then make the word plural, and if you add a ' to the end of foxes, it would make the word possessive. fox = singular noun fox's = singular possessive noun foxes = plural noun foxes' = plural possessive noun
It only becomes a plural possessive noun when you add extra letters - e.g. princesses'
To make the plural noun "meteors" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: meteors'
The word 'what' does not have a possessive form.The word 'what' is not a noun.The word 'what' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'what' is a interrogative or a relative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.The adjective 'what' is a word used to describe a noun.
To change a singular possessive noun to a plural possessive noun, first you must change the noun from a singular noun to a plural noun. The reason for this is that plural nouns can take different forms which will determine how the plural possessive is formed. Examples:A plural noun that ends with the letter s, just add an apostrophe after the ending s (s').singular noun, boy; plural noun, boys; plural possessive boys'An irregular plural noun that does not end with s, add anapostrophes ('s) to the end of the word.singular noun, child; plural noun, children; plural possessive children's
No, Sarah is not a possessive noun. To make Sarah possessive, you must add an apostrophe s, making it Sarah's.
The possessive form is the businessmen's meeting.Plural nouns that do not end with -s, add an apostrophe -s for the possessive form.
You form the possessive of a noun by adding an apostrophe and an s. You can frequently do the same thing by using the preposition of. That can clarify the situation when you could confuse possessive and plural or cause some other type of confusion.
The possessive form for the singular noun speed is speed's.Example: This device will measure your speed's velocity.
Usually, you add 's (for singular possessive) and s' for plural possessive.
To make the plural noun "days" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: days'
A possessive noun shows ownership. Add an apostrophe and s ('s) to a singular noun. Add s and an apostrophe (s') to a plural noun. Add an apostrophe and s ('s) to irregulare plural nouns. I hope this helps you.