The plural possessive form is friends'. The apostrophe indicates that something in the sentence belongs to the friends.
Example: It was nice to see our friends' kids at the picnic.
The possessive form of the plural noun friends is friends'.Example: They were able to recover from the flood with all of their friends' help
The possessive form of the plural noun friends is friends'.Example: They were able to recover from the flood with all of their friends' help
The possessive form of the plural noun friends is friends'.Example sentence: My friends' names are Jack and Jill.
Almost. The name Julia is a proper noun and must be capitalized.The possessive noun is Julia's.The possessive noun phrase is Julia's friend.
The noun friends is the plural form for the singular noun friend.The possessive forms are friend's (singular) and friends' (plural).
The possessive form for the plural noun mornings is mornings'.
The word friends is the plural form of the singular noun friend.example: My friends came over to watch a movie.The possessive form of the singular noun friend is friend's.example: It was nice to see our friends' kids at the picnic.An apostrophe "s" at the end of the word shows possession.
Yes, friends' is the plural possessive form of friend.
To make the plural noun "meteors" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: meteors'
Possessive nouns relating to me:Mary's roomMary Smith's addressMary's phoneMary's friends
'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 for the noun electricity is electricity's.