Assuming you're writing the card on behalf of more than one smith - use smiths
You can sign the greeting card as "The Smiths" if you're referring to the family in a collective sense. If you want to personalize it a bit more, you might write "With love from the Smith family" or simply "From the Smiths." If it's a specific occasion, you could also include a brief message before signing your name.
smiths
No Will Smith is Jaden Smiths Dad
You would sign it without an apostrophe, because a plural does not usually need an apostrophe. So it would be: Love, the Smiths.
A smith works with metal. There are gold smiths, silver smiths, black (iron is black metal), tin smiths, copper smiths, etc.
Jaden Smiths parents are Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith
The correct way to refer to the family would be "Smith family" without the definite article "the." So, it should be "Smith family" when referring to them in a general sense, while "the Smiths" can be used to refer to the family members collectively.
Will Smith.
The possessive form of the plural noun Smiths is Smiths'.example: The Smiths' house is number thirty-two.
no. Jaden smith is willow smiths BROTHER not sister. WILLOW is the sister
Dear Smith's
PluralIf referring to something about the Smith family as two or more, it would be the plural Smiths. Ex. The Smiths have two daughters, one son, a dog, a parrot, a hamster, and one snake.*In the above sentence "The Smiths" takes the place in the sentence for "The parents".In addressing, say a Christmas Card, it would be The Smiths.PossessiveIf referring to something owned by a person with the last name of Smith, it would be pluralized and then made possessive, reading Smiths'.Example sentences of possession:The Smiths' dog chased our cat up a tree.The noise that kept me awake until 2 a.m. was the Smiths' dog.When the Smiths held their New Year's Eve party, one of the Smiths' cars and one of the Jones' cars collided in the driveway. (bold is plural, the other two are possessive)Johnny is one of the Smiths living on Second Street.A roofer discovered that raccoons were living in the Smiths' attics and promptly told the Smiths about the various health and safety risks associated with removing the animals. (bold is plural, the other is possessive)