No, "five days notice" is not possessive; it is a phrase indicating a specified amount of time before an event. The term "five days" describes the duration of the notice, while "notice" is a noun. If it were possessive, it would need to be phrased as "five days' notice," with an apostrophe to indicate that the notice belongs to the five days.
To make the plural noun "days" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: days'
The possessive form of the plural noun days is days'.example: It was two days' journey to the nearest city.
The plural form is days. The plural possessive is days'.
Any possessive noun or pronoun can be an adjective. My house, your house, his house, their house, Bobby's house. Notice that possessive pronouns do not take an apostrophe.
Neither. 7 days' notice.
The plural form of the noun day is days.The plural possessive form is days'.example: The campsite is two days' hike from the road.
The noun days is the plural form of the singular noun day.The possessive form of the singular noun is day's (a day's work).The possessive form of the plural noun is days' (two days' work).
No, the form day's is the singular possessive.The plural noun is days. The plural possessive form is days'.Examples:At the end of the day's activities, the children fell right to sleep. (singular possessive)My brother is home on a three days' leave. (plural possessive)
The possessive form of it is "its." Notice that there is no apostrophe. "It's" is a contraction for "it is" or "it has." "Its" without an apostrophe is the possessive form of it. The same holds true for his, hers, ours, and theirs -- none of these have apostrophes.
two days' notice
Yes, the word day (singular) or days (plural) can be possessive. Examples: The day's activities were exhausting. (the activities of the day) The days' length are getting shorter. (the length of the days)
yes, the "let there be" pattern. He used the Word for the first 5 days. Gen. 1