Yes, America's is a singular, proper, possessive noun.
Ben Franklin is a proper noun, a singular noun. Ben Franklin is not a possessive noun. The possessive form is Ben Franklin's. Example sentence:Ben Franklin's life was long and interesting.
Americas Quarterly was created in 2005.
The nominative pronoun is we, and the objective pronoun is us. (first person plural)The possessive adjective (used with nouns) is our.The possessive pronoun (used alone) is ours.
The possessive pronoun for the first person, plural prounoun 'us' is ours.example: The house on the corner is ours.The possessive adjective for the first person, plural pronoun 'us' is our.example: Our house is on the corner.
major and largest empire in the Americas
The above sentence should read: Benjamin Franklin was one of America's greatest citizens.America's is the possessive.
Him is not possessive. The possessive would be 'his'.
No, he is not possessive. The possessive form would be his.
The singular possessive is biker's; the plural possessive is bikers'.
Women's is a plural possessive. The singular possessive is woman's
The singular possessive is ant's.The plural possessive is ants'.
The possessive form of "he" is "his": He did his homework after dinner.
The singular possessive is "ox's". Another contributor wrote "oxen's", but that is the plural possessive.
The singular possessive is Richard's; the plural possessive is Richards'.
The singular possessive is athlete's. The plural possessive is athletes'.
Possessive nouns (but not possessive pronouns) use apostrophes; therefore, "brother's" is possessive. "Brothers" is plural.
Singular possessive: secretary's Plural: secretaries Plural possessive: secretaries'