To turn giraffe into a singular possessive noun, add an apostrophe and an S, for example:
"The giraffe's tongue was very long".
no. in order for it to be a correct example of singular possession, it would be "woman's club." "women's club is plural possession
The noun 'giraffe' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of mammal, a word for a thing.
Girafe is the French equivalent of the English word "giraffe." The feminine singular noun may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or indefinite une ("a, an"). The pronunciation will be "zhee-rahf" in French.
<improved answer> The singular possessive form of monkey is monkey's. For a singular possession to be shown, you would formulate the sentence to show that the monkey has something (possession) or owns something (possession) by adding an apostrophe after monkey. Example: The monkey's hair was blonde.
The plural form of the noun giraffe is giraffes.The plural possessive form is giraffes'.example: We followed the giraffes' foot prints to find a group to photograph.
Both expressions show possession. The apostrophe before the s indicates singular posession and the apostrophe after the s indicates plural possession. Example: the car's bumper (singular); the cars' bumpers (plural)
This is incorrect. Apostrophes are not used to make plural words singular. Apostrophes are used to show possession or to indicate missing letters in contractions. Plural words are formed by adding "s" or "es" depending on the word.
you go buy a giraffe and then you put the giraffe on a dog and theres your halloween giraffe costume
The phrase "the ladies' handbags" indicates plural possession, referring to multiple ladies who own the handbags. The use of the apostrophe after "ladies" signifies that the handbags belong to more than one woman. Thus, it is not singular possession but rather a case of group possession.
Yes. Examples: The giraffe was fighting the other giraffe. I saw a giraffe at the zoo today. Etc
The singular possessive is business's. The plural possessive is businesses'.
The correct form is "staff's" when indicating possession by a singular staff member. "Staffs'" is used when indicating possession by multiple staff members.