The possessive adjective "its" would have the plural "their" or "theirs". Neither uses an apostrophe. Example : "The cat ate its food. The dogs ate their food." Example: "The car was theirs."
A possessive phrase shows ownership or possession of something, and typically includes an apostrophe followed by an "s". For example, "John's book" is a possessive phrase indicating that the book belongs to John.
To change a phrase to a possessive phrase, you typically add an apostrophe and the letter "s" ('s) to the noun that owns or possesses something. For example, "the cat's toy" or "Mary's book."
The possessive form is 'the cat's tail'.
The possessive phrase would be "the teacher's book."
The possessive noun phrase is the fathers' rights.
"The shoes of the horse" is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase; the phrase has no verb. There is no possessive noun is the phrase. The possessive form for the phrase is: "The horse'sshoes...".
No.A possessive noun is - noun + ' sThe boy's father went away. The possessive form boy's tells us whose father.The cat's food was gone. The possessive cat'stells us who the food belongs to.
cat's
The possessive noun phrase is the fathers' rights.
The possessive noun in the phrase "the telephone of the children" is "children's." It indicates that the telephone belongs to the children.
The possessive form is my cat'sveterinarian.