The word babies is the plural form for the noun baby. You use the possessive form for the plural noun when something 'belongs to' two or more babies. Example:
Put the babies' laundry is in the babies'room.
The babies' nursery is on the third floor. (In this case, the nursery doesn't belong to the babies, it's the nursery for the babies.)
The word mine is the possessive form, a possessive pronoun, a word that take the place of a noun that belongs to me. Example:The house on the corner in mine.
The spelling its is itself the possessive. The word does not use an apostrophe.The spelling it's is a contraction for "it is" and should not be used as the possessive.
The word 'possessive' is a noun as a word for a grammatical form showing ownership, possession, purpose, or origin.The most common use of the word 'possessive' is as an adjective to describe a noun; example: She finally dumped her possessive boyfriend.
The possessive is the standard form - playmate's - and the possessive of the plural can use only the apostrophe - playmates' - in accordance with standard usage.
The word 'neither' is a conjunction which doesn't have a plural or possessive form. The word 'neither' is an adjective which doesn't have a plural or possessive form. The word 'neither' is an adverb which doesn't have a plural or possessive form. The word 'neither' is an indefinite pronoun meaning not one and not the other of two or more people or things. There is no plural or possessive form for saying 'not one or the other'. The pronoun 'neither' can take a singular or plural verb form, depending on use.
No, the word sharpness is a common, abstract, uncountable noun, a word for the quality of a thing.I can't think of a use for the noun sharpness in the possessive form; I don't know what the quality of sharpness could posses. If there is a use for the possessive form, that would be: sharpness's.
The word country's is the singular possessive form; the plural possessive form is countries'.
You use Dennis's when meaning, "belonging to Dennis." It's the possessive form of Dennis, which is a name.
No, the possessive word its is a pronoun. The possessive pronouns and the possessive adjectives do not use an apostrophe to show possession. They are:possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, their, its.When an apostrophe is placed in the word, it's, that is the contraction for itis. For example:It is time for lunch.It's time for lunch.
Use whichever form you use to say it Alexis' or Alexis's. Use the form the way you pronounce it.
There are two accepted forms for possessive singular nouns ending in s:Add an apostrophe (') after the existing s at the end of the word: alumnus'Add an apostrophe s ('s) after the existing s at the end of the word: alumnus'sNote: The -s's is the most commonly used form, but if you are a student, use the form that is preferred by your teacher.
The singular possessive form of the word "cross" is "cross's." This indicates ownership or association, as in "the cross's design" or "the cross's significance." In some cases, people may also use "cross'" for stylistic reasons, but "cross's" is the standard form.