The possessive form can be princess's or princess' -- although some styles require the apostrophe S instead of just the apostrophe in formal writing, the meaning is usually obvious, and does have the benefit of not being confused with a colloquial contraction (e.g. He knows where the princess's been).
The correct spelling is belonging to the princess.
An example sentence is "this room holds everything belonging to the princess".
That is the correct spelling (despite the ungainly three S form) of princess's (of or belonging to a single princess).The similar nouns and their possessives are :princess (singular noun)princess'sprincesses (plural noun)princesses'prince (singular noun, male)prince'sprinces (plural noun, male)princes'
princesses
princsoo
Men's room (a room belonging to men).
"It's" means "that belonging to it." All other uses of the word spell it as "its."
That is the correct spelling (despite the ungainly three S form) of princess's (of or belonging to a single princess).The similar nouns and their possessives are :princess (singular noun)princess'sprincesses (plural noun)princesses'prince (singular noun, male)prince'sprinces (plural noun, male)princes'
Those letters spell princess.
In English it is grammatical to say "You are a beautiful princess".
Tiana from The Princess and the Frog.
Put an apostrophe after the s.
Prinsesse.
Princesa
Prinzessin
prinsessa.
princsoo
princesses
No, and you spell Feona like Fiona! Sorry.