For nouns ending in the letter z, add an apostrophe s ('s) after the z.
Examples:
We're going to Liz's party tonight.
Mr. Diaz's office is on the second floor.
A noun that ends with the letter z forms the plural by adding -es to the end of the word. For example, the singular Heinz becomes the Heinzes.The plural possessive form is the Heinzes'.example: The Heinzes' children are twins.
Monkey's is the possessive form for monkey
The possessive form is: the dog's footprints
The possessive form for the plural noun creatures is creatures'.
The plural possessive form of lion is lions'.
The possessive form of who is whose.
Whose is the possessive form of who. It means "belonging to whom." Who's is also a possessive form of who, but it is a contraction of "who is".The correct form is: Whose turn is it?
The possessive form for the interrogative pronoun who is whose.
The possessive form of the pronoun 'who' is whose.Example as interrogative pronoun:Who parked in our driveway?Whose car is in our driveway?Example as relative pronoun:The one who parked in our driveway is the contractor.The one whose car is in the driveway is the contractor.
The possessive form for the noun person is person's.
Person's He's is not a possessive form the possessive for he is his. His car His son not he's
The word 'whose' is an interrogative pronoun and relative pronoun.The pronoun 'whose' is the possessive form for 'who' or 'which'.EXAMPLESinterrogative pronoun: Whose book did you borrow? (possessive of 'who')relative pronoun: The book whose cover is missing is mine. (possessive of 'which')
The word its is the third person singular possessive pronoun.The word their is the third person plural possessive pronoun.There is no objective form of its, but the objective form of their is theirs.
No. The word "whose" is a possessive form of the pronoun who. It is used as an adjective. (e.g. find out whose car was damaged)Note: the spelling who's is not a possessive - it is a contraction of 'who is'
The plural possessive noun for mercy is "mercies'". The plural possessive form of any noun whose plural ends in "s" is the plural itself followed by an apostrophe. The plural possessive form of any noun whose plural does not end in "s" is the plural itself followed by an apostrophe followed by "s".Examples:Singular Singular possessive Plural Plural possessiveMercy Mercy's Mercies Mercies'Cat Cat's Cats Cats'Child Child's Children Children's
Yes, the pronoun 'whose' is the possessive form of 'who'.The pronouns 'who' and 'whose' are both interrogative pronouns and relative pronoun.Example as interrogative pronoun:Who parked in our driveway?Whose car is in our driveway?Example as relative pronoun:The one who parked in our driveway is the painter.The one whose car is in the driveway is the painter.
The two spellings that sound alike are:whose - possessive form of who (whose idea, person whose name is called)who's - contraction of who is or who has (who's at the door, who's been eating cookies)