"Father's" indicates possession by one father, while "fathers'" indicates possession by multiple fathers.
My father's house. The apostrophe shows that your father is in possession of the house.
The fathers' discussion about their children led to tears among the men.The fathers' golf outing raised over five-thousand dollars for charity.Many people criticized fathers' inattentiveness to their children.
The plural possessive of "Father" is, "Fathers"
The plural form of the noun father-in-law is fathers-in-law.The plural possessive form is fathers-in-law's.example: The fathers-in-law's project was a gift for our anniversary.
The plural form of the noun father is fathers.The plural possessive form is fathers'.Example: How many fathers' names are on the list of volunteers?
father
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "fathers-in-law" (more than one father-in-law).
"Fathers' names" is the correct way to refer to the names of multiple fathers. "Father's name" is the possessive form used when talking about one specific father.
No, the correct plural is fathers-in-law, a hyphenated compound noun.
no you only have too because of the law and so that you have proof who your father is otherwise if the fathers name is not put on you can have a DNA test which is 99.8 % of the time correct.
That's correct.
There is no definitive answer to say this is entirely correct as everyone is different. There may be similarities to fathers and grandfathers though.
you lighten fathers on fathers day.
Because they are the fathers.
It is confusing because there were two different "Fathers of Confederation". The first fathers were the fathers who attended the three meetings. The second fathers were the fathers who entered confederation later.
My father's house. The apostrophe shows that your father is in possession of the house.
The possessive form of the plural noun fathers is: the fathers' rights.