The sky is the limit.
Or,,
The Sky's the limit.
The phrase has always been: The sky's the limit. It means, there is no limit.
Both are correct, but the meaning is not the same.-- The word skies is the plural of sky (usually for effect, e.g. the dark skies above the valley).-- The word sky's is a possessive with 's at the end (e.g. the sky's deep blue color).*The apostrophe form can be used, as in speech, to mean (the) sky is (e.g. the sky's the limit, or I can see that the sky's cloudy today)
The plural of sky is skies, as in "Nothing but blue skies up ahead."
Skies a Crossed Sky was created in 1996.
Skies is the plural form for the singular noun, sky.
That is the correct spelling of the word "sky" (plural skies).
Sky's is singular possessive; skies is plural; skies' is plural possessive.
The plural of sky is skies.
Blue skies isΜπλε ουρανοίblue sky isΓαλάζιο του ουρανού
The phrase "skies the limit" is a metaphorical expression to encourage limitless possibilities. Referencing footprints on the moon highlights past achievements in space exploration and challenges the idea that the sky is the ultimate boundary. It suggests that humans have already surpassed it by landing on the moon, showing that there are still greater heights to reach.
Skies
The plural (skies) is often used to mean "locations up in the air" (the skies over Chicago) and not at the physical blue sky itself. It also refers to the fact that are innumerable appearances to the sky, which determine what you are actually seeing. Seeing clouds could mean a "cloudy sky" although the sky itself is unchanged if you go above the clouds.Generally, you would use sky and skies interchangeably, except where the physical sky as a whole is concerned, as in "I looked up at the sky" where skies would seem to indicate there was more than one.