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.
The plural possessive form for the tails of the foxes is the foxes' tails.
No, the form foxes is the plural noun.The singular form is fox.The singular possessive form is fox's.The plural possessive form is foxes'.
The possessive form of the noun fox is fox's. example sentence: We saw a fox's footprints in the snow.
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.
The possessive form of the singular noun fox is fox's.The plural form of the noun fox is foxes.The plural possessive form is foxes'.Examples:I found a fox's footprints in the snow. (singular)There were several foxes' footprints in the snow. (plural)
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.
No, fox's is a singular possessive noun. The plural form of fox is foxes.
'es is not used to make the word fox into a singular possessive noun, rather you should add 's to fox to do so. If you add the suffix -es to fox, it would then make the word plural, and if you add a ' to the end of foxes, it would make the word possessive. fox = singular noun fox's = singular possessive noun foxes = plural noun foxes' = plural possessive noun
The possessive form of "he" is "his": He did his homework after dinner.
Some suitable nouns that might be a fox's are:the fox's pawsthe fox's pupsthe fox's preythe fox's den
No, it is singular, the possessive form of it is its. The plural form of it is they or them, and the possessive form is their.To answer the question directly: there is no such word as ITS'.
The possessive form is lawyer's.