I think the answer is number 1. Don't put ur 100% trust in me but when I read the question i felt the the first answer closely matched.
Hope this helps ;)
<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'
Rainsford's first night of the hunt was spent in a big tree. "big tree with a thick trunk and outspread branches. He climbed up into the crotch and, stretching out on one of the broad limbs, after a fashion, rested.
In Walt Whitman's Poem 6, "Song of Myself" he there discusses the cyclical nature of life. The theme of his poem is;
- Life has no real beginning or end; instead, it is a continuous circle.
When a young child asked Walt Whitman what the grass he had with him meant, instead of giving a straightforward answer, he made several speculations about the meaning of the grass.
For example, he reflected on how death brings forth new life. Grass sprang from compost.
Therefore, there was no real beginning or end. Life was cyclical in nature.
Learn more here:
brainly.com/question/5568238
I've read the poem it's pretty good