Pesquise entre vários professores de Inglês...
Michael
Please, people explain me difference between using is, 's and s'.
27 de jul de 2008 08:17
Respostas · 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 de julho de 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 de julho de 2008
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Michael
Habilidades linguísticas
Inglês, Russo, Espanhol
Idioma de aprendizado
Inglês, Espanhol
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