A possessive noun shows ownership or relationship, and in the phrase "tails of foxes," the possessive form would be "foxes' tails." This indicates that the tails belong to the foxes. Using the apostrophe before the "s" signifies that the tails are associated with multiple foxes.
The plural possessive form for the tails of the foxes is the foxes' tails.
The plural possessive is foxes'.Example use:All the foxes' tails were caked with mud.Nouns ending in s, z, x, sh, and ch are made plural by adding "es" to the end of the word.
Possessive nouns and possessive pronouns functions as adjectives which are used to describe a noun.
The possessive form of "fox" is "fox's." This indicates that something belongs to or is associated with the fox. In grammar, the apostrophe followed by the letter "s" is used to show possession for singular nouns.
No they have white tails
Yes. All canids have tails.
The possessive nouns in the sentence are:Frank'sSue'sThe pronoun in the sentence is 'his', a possessive adjective describing the noun 'house'.
The plural form of the noun fox is foxes.The plural possessive form is foxes'.Example:We found several foxes' footprints in the snow behind the house.
Yes. All canids have tails.
Possessive nouns show a relationship between the possessive noun and the noun that it shows possession for. An adjective may or may not be involved. John's book is on the desk. (The possessive form John's shows its relationship to the book, there are no adjectives in the sentence.)
Some suitable nouns that might be a fox's are:the fox's pawsthe fox's pupsthe fox's preythe fox's den
Apostrophes are use in possessive nouns and contraction. Susan's purse, Joey's bike, and bird's wing are examples of possessive nouns. Contractions are words such as can't (cannot), I'd (I would), and don't (do not).