men's organization.
The form girl's is the singular possessive form (belonging to one girl).The form girls' is the plural possessive form (belonging to two or more girls).Examples:A little girl's shoes were sitting by the door. (singular)All of the girls' shoes were lined up in a row. (plural)
It's the plural possessive form. For example: The sisters' dresses. This means the dresses belonging to the sisters (more than one sister).
"Plaintiff's" is the possessive form of "plaintiff," indicating something belonging to a single plaintiff. "Plaintiffs'" is the plural possessive form, indicating something belonging to multiple plaintiffs.
To change a possessive to a longer form, you can include the possessive pronoun (such as "his," "hers," "its," "theirs," etc.) followed by the noun it is possessing, instead of using the shortened form (e.g., "her book" instead of "her's book"). This makes the possession relationship more explicit and easier to understand in writing.
"Sisters' " this is a possessive noun, meaning "of or belonging to two or more sisters".
The possessive witness's pertains to something associated with a singular witness. The possessive witnesses' pertains to association with more than one individual witness (witnesses). (The exception here is for the plural ending in 's', which allows omission of the additional possessive 's', for written clarity and ease of pronunciation. Note that the singular possessive is pronounced identically to the plural AND plural possessive.)
The proper noun Howards is already plural. The singular is the name Howard. The singular possessive for Howard is Howard's (one Howard). The plural possessive is Howards' (of or belonging to more than one Howard).
No it is not. It is either grandparent's (belonging to one grandparent) or grandparents' (belonging to more than one of them).
The plural of trainee is trainees. The plural possessive is trainees' (of or belonging to more than one trainee).
The plural possessive form is schools'. Example sentence:The board decided that all of the schools' hours would be coordinated to accommodate the number of buses available.
Brother's is singular possessive. Brother is singular and brothers is plural.
A plural possessive is a noun form for two or more people or things (a plural noun) that shows something in the sentence belongs to those people or things. The possessive form can be either singular or plural.A singular possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.A plural possessive, for plurals that end in S, is formed by adding just an apostrophe (') after the S at the end of the word. Plural nouns that don't end in S (irregular plurals) form the possessive in the usual way, with an apostrophe S ('s) added to the end of the word.Example singular: Something belonging to one cat: the cat's toy (apostrophe s)Example plural: Something belonging to two or more cats: the cats' home, the cats' dishes (apostrophe only)Example irregular plural: Something belonging to two or more children: a children's playground.