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Michael
Please, people explain me difference between using is, 's and s'.
27 jul. 2008 08:17
Antwoorden · 2
For < s >, it is used to indicate a plural noun.
e.g. Houses, tables, cars, buildings
For < 's >, it is used to indicate possession of a person/thing.
e.g. Sally's books, the table's legs
< 's > is also used as the 'short form' of 'us'
e.g. Let's set off (which means 'Let us set off')
< 's > is used as the 'short form' of 'is' as well
e.g. That's it (which means 'That is it')
For < s' >, it is used to indicate the possession of a plural noun or a name that ends with 's'.
e.g. the tables' legs, Marcus' books
I hope this is helpful for you. (:
27 juli 2008
When a noun ends with the letter "s", for example, parents, teachers, abacus, etc...its possessive case should be ~~~~s'
Otherwise, the noun's possessive case should be ~~~~~~'s
o(∩_∩)o
27 juli 2008
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Michael
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Russisch, Spaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels, Spaans
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