The towels of the hotels (plural towels and plural hotels) is the hotels' towels.
The sentence "the towels of the hotels" contains no possessive noun. If however you rewrite the sentence as "the hotels' towels" then the possessive noun is hotels'.
The towels of the hotels (plural towels and plural hotels) is the hotels' towels.
The possessive form for the towels of the hotels is "the hotels' towels." This indicates that the towels belong to multiple hotels. If referring to a single hotel, it would be "the hotel's towels."
The possessive form is 'the hotel's towels'.
The towels of the hotel = the hotel'stowels.
The possessive form is the hotel's towels.
The towels of the hotel = the hotel's towels.
Possessive nouns and possessive pronouns functions as adjectives which are used to describe a noun.
The hotel's towels are nice
The possessive nouns in the sentence are:Frank'sSue'sThe pronoun in the sentence is 'his', a possessive adjective describing the noun 'house'.
Yes, hotels typically provide towels for guests during their stay.
Possessive nouns show a relationship between the possessive noun and the noun that it shows possession for. An adjective may or may not be involved. John's book is on the desk. (The possessive form John's shows its relationship to the book, there are no adjectives in the sentence.)