Other's is singular possessive. Others' would be the plural possessive
"la vie" (fem.)plural "les vies" : just add an "s" at the end of the word (do not pronounce it)during all our lives... : pendant toutes nos vies...
The word 'vie' is French for life. It's a feminine gender noun. So its definite article is 'la' ['the']. Its indefinite article is 'une' ['a, one']. In the plural, the form is 'vies', for 'lives'. The definite article in the plural is 'les' ['the']. The indefinite article is 'des' ['some'].
The Spanish phrase 'vive en' means [he/she/it] lives in... . In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'vive' is the third person singular form in the present indicative tense. And the preposition 'en' means 'in'.
Answer #1 Live. Answer #2 The Spanish word 'vive' comes from the verb 'vivir', which means 'to live'. The word 'vive' is the third person singular form [he/she/it/formal you in the singular] of the verb. It's in the present indicative tense. The meaning therefore is he/she/it/formal you in the singular as 'usted'] live.
"Vivi" means he/she/it lives, and "en" means in, at or on.Example: Ella vivi en España. She lives in Spain.Actually, as written, "vivi" means nothing in Spanish. The verb "vivir" means "to live", but "vivi" is not one of the conjugated forms. The present tense forms are: "vivo, vives, vive, vivimos, viváis, viven."In the preterit, (simple past tense), the first person singular form is "viví" (note the accent mark), or "I lived".In the original response, if you used "Vive en España", it would mean "He/she lives in Spain". Or "You (formal) live in Spain".
The noun wars is the plural form of the singular noun war.The singular possessive form is war's.The plural possessive form is wars'.Examples:Our city was in ruins by the war's end. (singular)The wars' cost in lives in the twentieth century should never be repeated. (plural)
The singular form for the plural noun lives is life. The singular possessive form is life's. Example: His life's works are housed in the new museum.
The singular possessive form of the proper noun Mr. French is Mr. French's.The plural form is the Mr. Frenches.The plural possessive form is the Mr. Frenches'.examples:Mr. French's brother lives with him. The two Mr. Frenches' house is the brick one on the corner.
The plural of life is lives.The plural possessive form of lives is lives'
Major General's would be singular possessive. Such as: The Major General's decision could change the lives of his men. Plural possessive would be Major Generals', with the apostrophe after the s.
The possessive form of the plural noun lives is lives'.
The plural of your life is your lives.
Life is a singular noun. The plural form is lives.
A possessive pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.The singular possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, his, hers, its.Examples:Your bicycle is just like mine.Which of these coats is yours?Jack lives on this street. The yellow house is his.
The possessive pronoun 'ours' is plural, a word that takes the place of a noun belonging to more than one person.The singular possessive pronouns are mine, yours (both singular and plural), his, hers, and its.Examples:John and I live on this street. The red house is ours. (plural)John lives on this street. The red house is his. (singular)I live on this street. The red house is mine. (singular)She lives on this street. The red house is hers. (singular)You live on this street. The red house is yours. (singular)You and John live on this street. The red house is yours. (plural)
Life Plural = Lives
The possessive form of lives, which is the plural of life, is formed by adding an apostrophe at the end: lives'.For example, "Their lives' contributions are memorialized in this mural."