The plural possessive form of "traveler's" is "travelers'." This indicates ownership by multiple travelers. For example, you might say, "The travelers' luggage was lost."
The plural possessive form is travelers'.
No, it is not a preposition. The word travelers is a plural noun.
If the plural noun has possession, indicate it by using an apostrophe after the S.
Possess is a verb. Its plural form (the one used with plural subjects) is possess, while the form used with singular subjects is possesses.Examples:We possess, they possess.He, she or it possesses.The noun form of possess is possession, plural possessions.
Yes, the word dogs is a plural noun. The singular noun is dog.
If you are referring to the possession of the plural requests.
The plural form for the noun tooth is teeth.The plural possessive form is teeth's.Example: This product will improve your teeth's whiteness.
f the noun is pluraland already ends in s, add an apostropheafter the s to show possession. Thefrogs’ skin is mottled. = the skin belongs to the frogs. Apostrophes for plural possession
The possessive form of the plural noun traditions is traditions'.Example: These traditions' origins are centuries old.
The plural form of the noun glove is gloves.The plural possessive form is gloves'.Example: The gloves' lining is very soft.
The plural form of the noun lady is ladies.The plural possessive form is ladies'.example: We're planning a ladies' night out.
The plural form for the proper noun Ross is Rosses; the plural possessive form is Rosses'.