The possessive form for 'the paddle of the boy' is 'the boy's paddle'.
Yes if you are using it as a possessive. For example "It is within the United Nation's purview to make that decision."
No, using the apostrophe makes W-4 into the singular possessive form. The correct plural is W-4s.
I paddled down the river.answ2. An old rhyme:-False friends are manyTrue friends are fewAlways paddle your own canoe.
The word 'her' is a possessive adjective; a pronoun that describes a noun and is placed just before the noun that it describes (answer).A possessive pronoun takes the place of a noun for something that belongs to someone or something; for example:She believed that the correct answer was hers.
A composition is a short essay. Composition also refers to how you structure your writing using the correct grammar rules and rhetoric.
The word paddle can be either a noun or a verb. A paddle is an instrument that is used to move a boat. If using the device, we are said to paddle the boat. She grabbed the other paddle to help row the boat. [noun use] The two of them paddle the boat clear of the rocks. [verb use]
It would help if you first wrote the question using correct grammar. Try again.
To change a possessive to a longer form, you can include the possessive pronoun (such as "his," "hers," "its," "theirs," etc.) followed by the noun it is possessing, instead of using the shortened form (e.g., "her book" instead of "her's book"). This makes the possession relationship more explicit and easier to understand in writing.
Client's is the correct spelling for the singular form, e.g. "That is my client's briefcase." Clients' is the correct punctuation for the plural form, e.g. "Those are my clients' briefcases."
The plural of Inuit can be either Inuit or Inuits. If you are using Inuit as the plural, then the plural possessive is Inuit's; if you are using Inuits as the plural, then the plural possessive is Inuits'.
"Out of Office" used to be "Out of Faculty". Microsoft kept using "OOF" when writing about "Out of Office" - so I guess that is the correct term.
The indefinite pronoun 'everyone' is singular (everyone). The possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word. Example sentence:I have graded everyone's essays and you all did very well.