The plural form of the noun manservant is menservants.
The plural possessive form is menservants'.
Example: The menservants' quarters are located in a separate building.
An apostrophe (') to indicate the omission of one or more letters in a word, such as gov't for government. Or to indicate the possessive case, such as in woman's.
Apostrophe...to indicate the omission of one or more letters in a word. As in o'er for over. Also to indicate the possessive case, as in man's
First person singular: my (possessive adjective), mine (possessive pronoun)Second person siingular: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person singular: his, her, its (possessive adjectives), his, hers, its (possessive pronouns)First person plural: our (possessive adjective), ours (possessive pronoun)second person plural: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person plural: their (possessive adjective), theirs (possessive pronoun)
Of or pertaining to possession; having or indicating possession., The possessive case., A possessive pronoun, or a word in the possessive case.
The possessive case for the word "princess" is "princess's." This form is used to indicate that something belongs to the princess, such as "the princess's crown." In cases where proper nouns end in "s," some style guides may accept the alternative form "princess'."
A possessive case noun is used to indicate ownership, possession, origin or purpose.Francine's sweater (a sweater owned by Francine)the cat's cleverness (cleverness possessed by the cat)Shakespeare's plays (plays originated by Shakespeare)the children's playground (a playground intended for children)
The verbs "have" and "possess" indicate literal possession, but not legal possession. The verb "to own" or "to inherit" implies legal rights.* The type of noun that can indicate ownership is the possessive or genitive case.
The possessive case of resurrection of Christ is Christ's resurrection.
Yes, "king's rights" is the correct singular form for the rights of the king.
Possessive adjectives indicate belonging. The possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, their, our, and whose.His bicycle is green.Whose car is that?
The pronoun 'your' is the possessive case; a possessive adjective, a word that describes a noun as belonging to you.
No, possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe to indicate possession.The possessive pronouns are words that take the place of a possessive noun.The pronouns that show possession are:possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.Nouns indicate possession using an apostrophe. Examples:That is Nancy's house. (possessive noun)That house is hers. (possessive pronoun)That is her house. (possessive adjective)