Some plural possessive nouns that start with letter N are:
No, not all words have a distinct plural possessive form. Some singular possessive forms can be used to indicate possession for both singular and plural nouns. For example, "children's" can be used for the plural possessive of "child" and "children."
To pluralize compound possessive nouns, add an apostrophe and an "s" to the last word of the compound noun. For example, "my brothers-in-law's car" is the possessive form of the compound noun "brothers-in-law" in plural form.
A word is plural when it refers to more than one item, while a word is possessive when it shows ownership or belonging. Plural nouns typically end in -s, -es, or -ies, while possessive nouns are often formed by adding 's or just an apostrophe ('), depending on the word.
To form the possessive of a noun, add an apostrophe and an "s" ('s) after the noun. For plural nouns ending in "s," just add an apostrophe after the "s" ('). For plural nouns not ending in "s," add an apostrophe and an "s" ('s).
No, singular possessive (and some plural possessive) nouns end with -'s.Many contractions end with -n't, words that are joined together with missing letter(s) denoted by an apostrophe. Examples:do not = don'tcan not = can'twere not = weren'twould not = wouldn'tcould not = couldn'tshould not = shouldn't
Some nouns that are the same for the singular and the plural are:deerfishelksheepoffspringSome nouns are singular but appear to be plural; words that are a short form for 'a pair of...'. There is no plural for these nouns, the plurals are expressed by using 'pairs of...'. Some examples are:pantsshortsglassesscissorsbinocularsUncountable nouns have no plural form and take a verb for the singular. Some uncountable nouns are:moneyinformationnewsadviceelectricity
The plural of datum is data. The plural possessive is data's.E.g. The data's theft put some customer accounts at risk.
To form possessive nouns, add an apostrophe and the letter "s" ('s) to the end of a singular noun, or just an apostrophe after a plural noun. For example, "The book belonging to Sarah" becomes "Sarah's book," and "The books of the students" becomes "the students' books."
The singular possessive form is lunch's.The plural noun is lunches.The plural possessive form is lunches'.Examples:He left his lunch's remains on his dresser. (singular)Some of our school lunches' ingredients come from our vegetable garden. (plural)
Example sentence for possessive nouns:Jack's bicycle is new but Jill's is not.A regular plural noun is form by adding an s or es to the end of the word, for example:aunt, auntsauction, auctionsapple, applesAn irregular plural noun is formed in some other way, for example:child, childrengoose, geesemedium, media
An irregular plural possessive noun is a noun that is both plural and possessive in form, but does not follow the usual rule of adding an apostrophe-s ('s) to show possession. For example, "children's" is an irregular plural possessive noun because "children" is already plural but to show possession, only an apostrophe is added (children').
"Japanese" is an adjective, and so it has no plural form. While some national adjectives may be used as nouns having a plural form - we may say Germans and Italians and Bengalis, for example - national adjectives in -ese are not among them. Use the periphrastic, originally French possessive form: of the Japanese.