Yes, "farmer's wife" is a noun phrase. It consists of the noun "wife" modified by the possessive form of the noun "farmer."
"Wife's" is the singular possessive form of the noun "wife," used to show that something belongs to one wife. "Wives'" is the plural possessive form, used to indicate that something belongs to multiple wives.
The singular possessive form of wife is wife's.Example: My wife's name is Elizabeth.
The plural of wife is wives.The plural possessive form of wives is wives'(apostrophe after the S).The singular possessive form is wife's.
Wife's My wife's hair is black.
The plural form of the noun wife is wives.The plural possessive form is wives'.Example: Both of our wives' birthdays are this week.
The form wives' is the plural possessive form for the singular noun wife. Adding the apostrophe (') to the end of the word makes it a possessive form. Examples:singular: The wife of a player originated the charity event.plural: The wives of the players have continued the tradition of an annual charity event.plural possessive: The wives' efforts have raised a lot of money for the charity.
The singular possessive of the noun wife is wife's.The plural form for the noun wife is wives.The plural possessive form is wives'.Examples:My wife's birthday is on Friday.Well, what do you know, our wives' birthdays are the same day.
No, the word "it" is a singular pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for one thing.The word "it" is not a possessive form.The possessive pronoun and possessive adjective is its.
The possessive word for Priscilla is "Priscilla's."
The plural form of the noun wife is wives.The plural possessive form is wives'.Example: Our wives' birthdays are on the same day, we should plan a party.
The possessive form of the word "dictionary" is "dictionary's."