Wiki User
β 9y agoNONE are correct examples of plural possessive nouns.
The correct plural possessive noun is:
b. men's plans
The remaining phrases are singular forms:
a. stone's throw
c. its place (singular possessive adjective; pronouns do not use an apostrophe to show possession)
d. woman's plans
Wiki User
β 9y agoNo, in the form "stones throw", the noun "stones" is the plural form of the noun "stone".A possessive noun is indicated by an apostrophe s ('s) or just an apostrophe (') added to the end of a plural noun that already ends with an s.The correct plural possessive form is: stones'throwThe singular possessive form is: a stone'sthrow
The correct example of the plural possessive case would be "men's plans." This indicates that the plans belong to more than one man.
The correct spelling of the plural is "jewels" (gems, precious stones).
The plural of stone is stones.
The plural noun of stone is stones.
"These," because "stones" is plural.
Stones are extracted from kidneys and quarries.
It is neither correct to say " stones i've been thrown " nor "the stones i've been thrown at".
Yes, general collective nouns can be used, such as a heap of stones, a pile of stones, a row of stones, a truckload of stones, etc. Some collective nouns for stones are: A group of monumental stones is called a henge of stones. A mound of stones is called a cairn of stones.
One kilogram is approximately 0.1575 stones. For example, if you have 5 kilograms, that would be about 0.7875 stones.
The noun 'stone' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for a mineral substance; as a material noun as a word for something from which other things are made.In this context, the plural noun 'stones' is a word specifically for 'types of or 'kinds of' stone.Example: The grave markers were made of stones of several types.The noun 'stone' as a word of a piece of mineral substance is a count noun; the plural noun 'stones' is a word for two or more pieces of a mineral substance.Example: A gentoo penguin gathers stones and moss to build a nest.
The idiomatic phrase is "if these stones could talk" (or if these stones could speak), meaning that the location was likely the scene of historic occurrences, where most likely the stones have been in place for a very long time.