The possessive form for the plural noun dogs is dogs'.
Example: All of the dogs' collars have a tag imprinted with their name.
Yes, the word dogs is a plural noun. The singular noun is dog.
The possessive form for the plural noun dogs is dogs'.Example: All of the dogs' collars have a tag imprinted with their name.English plural nouns ending in s form the possessive by adding an apostrophe (') after the ending s.
The possessive form of the plural noun dogs is dogs'.The dogs stay:in a dogs' kennelin the dogs' housesin the dogs' owners' housesin the dogs' cages at the pet shop
The word dogs is a plural noun. The singular is dog.
The noun dog's is the singular possessive form (one dog, one collar).The plural possessive form is dogs' (The dogs' leather collars).
To convert a singular noun into a plural possessive form, simply add an apostrophe after the "s" of the plural form of the noun. For example, "dog" becomes "dogs'" in its plural possessive form.
The possessive form for the plural noun wives is wives'.
The plural possessive noun of molecules is molecules' .
The plural form for the noun buzz is buzzes; the plural possessive form is buzzes'.
The plural possessive noun for "vowel" is "vowels'".
Yes, they can; for example:The boys ran for the school bus. (plural noun, boys)The boy's parents bought him a bicycle. (singular possessive noun, boy's; plural noun parents)Both boys' bicycles were blue. (plural possessive noun, boys'; plural noun, bicycles)
The word sisters is the plural form; the plural possessive is sisters'.