<u>In order to create the possessive form of a noun you should add </u><u>'s</u><u>. If the noun ends in </u><u>s</u><u> then you have two options: either you add </u><u>'s</u><u> like you do with any other singular noun or you just add an apostrophe </u><u>'</u><u> at the end of the noun</u>.
boy-boy's
soldier-soldier's
lady-lady's
Jones-Jones's OR Jones'
Princess- Princess's OR Princess'
Shepherd- Shepherd's
child- child's
Mr. Dicken- Mr. Dicken's
man- man's
kerry- kerry's
<u>If the noun is in plural and ends in </u><u>s </u><u>then you will just add an apostrophe </u><u>' </u><u>at the end. If it is in plural but it doesn't end in </u><u>s</u><u> then you should add </u><u>'s</u><u>.</u>
kerry-kerries'
wives- wives'
woman- women's
policeman- policemen's
boxes-boxes'
oxen-oxen's
salesman-salesmen's
sopranos-sopranos'
deer-deers'
toys-toys'
empresses-empresses'
14.56 is rounded to the nearest hundredth.<span />
Answer:
sorry about that but you prolly did great
Explanation:
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
The last time I used a text reference successfully to preview, prepare for, review, or locate the information I was learning was precisely last week.
I was trying to learn more about the Revolutionary War of Independence, trying to collect some valid information to write an essay. So I had to search on the internet because the school library and the local library are closed. So I search on the internet to look for some secondary sources that could help me do my work.
To do so, I had to use a text reference to search for the proper information and be more specific. Doing this I found very good information about the reasons the American colonists had to start the Revolutionary War against the British troops. I even found something that caught my attention: Thomas Pain's "Common Sense." A pamphlet which ideas served as inspiration for the American colonists.
As an aging, conventional person of little consequence