No, the word "mens" is an incorrect form.
The plural noun is "men". The plural possessive form is men's.
The correct example of the plural possessive case is D) women's plans.
The correct plural possessive form is: men's plans (the plans of two or more men)
Yes, "men's plans" is the correct possessive form of the "plans of the men".
The correct plural possessive form is:B. the men's plans (the plans of a number of men)The correct singular possessive forms are:A. a stone's throw (the distance of a throw of a stone)D. the woman's plans (the plans of a woman)The incorrect possessive form is:C. it's place: the possessive form of the pronoun it is its (no apostrophe).The form it's (with apostrophe) is a contraction, a shortened form of "it is".
NONE are correct examples of plural possessive nouns.The correct plural possessive noun is:b. men's plansThe remaining phrases are singular forms:a. stone's throwc. its place (singular possessive adjective; pronouns do not use an apostrophe to show possession)d. woman's plans
Both are correct. I/you/we/they have plans. He/she/it has plans.
The number of plans is not a relevant factor in these type of questions. It is the number of women that is important. A woman's plan or a woman's plans are both singular for the possessive. The women's plan or the women's plans are both plural for the possessive. Confusing, I know.
b - possessive means that it belongs to someone or something (my house, John's bag) and plural means that you have more than one, and 'men' is the only one of the options where there's more than one. BTW, option C isn't a possessive at all. It's the contracted form of 'it is'. The correct form would be 'its'.
the answer is c.
As part of a sentence, "what your plans are" is correct. For example, "Please let me know what your plans are" is a perfectly good sentence. If, however, you are asking whether "what your plans are" is a correct sentence by itself, it is not. If it is intended as a question, it should be "What are your plans?"
That is the correct spelling of "schedule" (timetable, plan, itinerary).
The likely word is the plural noun "schedules" (timetables, plans).