They would be your great great grandparents.
"Parent's names" is correct if you are referring to the names of one parent. "Parents' names" is correct if you are referring to the names of multiple parents.
It depends on who is being described. If there is one parent, it is parent's: the parent's car was parked outside. When describing several parents, it is parents': the parents' children were playing on the field.
Yes, parents' is a possessive noun; the plural possessive form of the singular noun parent.
Polish kids typically call their parents "mama" for mother and "tata" for father.
"Proud parents" is correct. Plural possessive form does not require an apostrophe before the "s" when the noun is already in plural form.
You would call people cousins who are descended from the siblings of your parents, grand parent, great grandparents, etc.
un grand-parent, plural des grands-parents
One's lineal ascendant is an ancestor in the direct line of descent, such as a parent, grandparent, great-grandparent, and so on. They are the individuals from whom a person is descended through a lineage of parent-child relationships.
to take care of children in their parent absence to help parents raise their children in an acceptable manner
Parental rights are paramount to "grandparents rights". In most jurisdictions there are no such rights.
No. The other parent can still call you in as a runaway.
Male and female parents. The pollen is transferred from male to the female parent.
No.Legal Guardians are your Parents.Unless you are signed over to your grand parents, your parents have the right to take you in/out of a school.Sign for your license, or sign for a court case.All in which a grand parent can NOT do without LEGAL Custody. (:
Yes, "grandparents" is a compound word made up of the words "grand" and "parents" combined together to represent the parents of a person's parent.
If you're in the US, he is not required to let you call your parents.
your mothers mother is called your grandmother. and your mothers father is called your grandfather.
possessive - parent's my parent's home {my parent [his/hers] home} plural- parents I have two parents JCF