To finish what the soldiers started by winning the Civil War.
Audience in the elizabethan era
Yes they had special guards that would keep an eye on the audience. Somethimes they would even have toresort to tourture. Yes they had special guards that would keep an eye on the audience. Somethimes they would even have toresort to tourture.
The Workers.
He knows the right person as soon as he looks into that person's eyes.
Pathos!
To finish what the soldiers started by winning the Civil War.
The plural form for the noun audience is audiences; the plural possessive form is audiences'.Example: The audiences' responses at all of the showings have been positive.
Audiences
The plural form of the noun audience is audiences.The plural possessive form is audiences'.Examples: All of his audiences' reactions are enthusiastic.
The noun 'audience' is singular (one audience).The plural noun is 'audiences'.Examples:The audience cheered when the villein was dragged away. (singular)The audiences at his performances can get rowdy. (plural)
It depends. If the it is plural then it goes at the end like : audiences' If it is singular it goes like this: audience's
simple, mass, diffused audience
Hancock audiences
creating media that appeal to their audience
audiences Audience is a collective noun. It means it's a group of people so there is no plural form. e.g. The audience was listening to the performance. The sentence is incorrect if you say: The audiences were listening to the performance. All collective nouns MUST have their own plural forms or they are NOT collective: hence, flock and flocks, team and teams, herd and herds, audience and audiences, etc. This rule helps one decide if a noun is collective or not.
No, the form audiences' is the possessive form of the plural noun audiences.The singular possessive form is audience's.
the audience of a particular media outlet.