No, the word lion's is the singular possessiveform.The plural noun is lions; the plural possessive form is lions'.
The singular noun is lion.The plural adds an S to form lions. (more than one lion)The plural possessive adds only an apostrophe to refer to more than one lion.The lions' skins and manes were dusty from the long journey across the plain.
The plural of zoo is zoos. The plural possessive form of zoos is zoos'.
The possessive form of the singular noun lion is lion's.Example: "The mouse stepped on the lion's tail."
"Bee" can be both singular and plural. The singular possessive form is "bee's," while the plural possessive form is "bees'."
No, the word lion's is the singular possessiveform.The plural noun is lions; the plural possessive form is lions'.
The plural possessive form of lion is lions'.
The possessive form of the plural noun lions is lions'.Example: We followed a pride of lions' footprints to a watering hole.
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The plural possessive form of "reply" is "replies'".
The plural form is founders. The plural possessive is founders'.
The plural form is valleys. The plural possessive is valleys'.
No, it is singular, the possessive form of it is its. The plural form of it is they or them, and the possessive form is their.To answer the question directly: there is no such word as ITS'.
The plural possessive form of branch is branches'.
The plural possessive form of "mass" is "masses'".
The plural possessive form of "experiments" is "experiments'."
The plural possessive form of "ravine" is "ravines'."