Artichoke is the nominative, or dictionary form of the word. Using an apostrophe (') between this word and an "s" creates it in the singular possessive form. Thus artichoke's is singular possessive. The possessive plural form is artichokes'.
Other's is singular possessive. Others' would be the plural possessive
The singular noun is museum, the singular possessive form is museum's.The plural noun is museums, the plural possessive form is museums'.
Property's (singular possessive form) rhymes with properties (plural form).
"My" is an English equivalent of the Spanish word mio.Specifically, the Spanish word is the masculine singular form of a possessive adjective. It is pronounced "MEE-oh". The feminine singular form, mia, is pronounced "MEE-ah".
carbō (yes, it's the root of the word carbon)At least, carbō is the nominative singular. Tenses of the word are as followsSingular:Nominative (subject) - carbōGenitive (possessive) - carbōnisDative (indirect object) - carbōnīAccusative (direct object) - carbōnemAblative (prepositional) - carbōnePlural:Nominative (subject) - carbōnēsGenitive (possessive) - carbōnumDative (indirect object) - carbōnibusAccusative (direct object) - carbōnēsAblative (prepositional) - carbōnibusHope this helped!
The singular possessive form of "test" is "test's".
The singular possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, and its. The singular possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, and its.
The singular possessive is ant's.The plural possessive is ants'.
Museum is singular. Museum's is singular possessive. Museums is plural. Museums' is plural possessive.
The singular possessive of dish is dish's
Taco's is the singular possessive.
The singular possessive form is classmate's.
The singular possessive is biker's; the plural possessive is bikers'.
The singular possessive is fish's.
Grave's is the singular possessive.
The singular possessive is Martin's.
Buzz's is the singular possessive.