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Mens’ or Men’s. Men’s is the plural possessive form of men. When the noun already ends in “s” and we want to make the word possessive, we need to put the apostrophe after the “s”. In this case, the plural is irregular and “men” doesn’t end in “s” so we need to add “s” to men.
- Mans or Man’s or Mans’ (English Grammar Explained)
Men’s is the plural possessive form of men. When the noun...
- Mans or Man’s or Mans’ (English Grammar Explained)
26 lip 2020 · While you're in school you can spell it men's (also women's, children's, oxen's, sheep's, deer's) with just plain old Apostrophe-S. You can't tell the singular from the plural possessive in speech, so there's no reason to do it in writing, either.
2 lip 2007 · The apostrophe-s and s-apostrophe indicate possession, whether singular or plural, and when the plural itself in an archaic one like "men" and "women," we treat the plural noun as if it were singular.
2 sty 2016 · X-case. Use the regular apostrophe s: "Alex's" is correct. S-case. Any name whose last syllable is pronounced with a long eez sound should have just the apostrophe, whereas others have apostrophe s. The followings are correct: Jones's; Menzies's ; Kents's; Jesus's; Xerxes' Euripides'
25 kwi 2013 · Mens is sometimes used as an alternative for, you guessed it, men's. It looks invalid because it's a possessive which should have an apostrophe before the "s" but as it's caught on, it's just considered acceptable now. There's also the common noun menswear which is often used instead of men's wear. Share.
Men’s is the plural possessive form of men. When the noun already ends in “s” and we want to make the word possessive, we need to put the apostrophe after the “s”. In this case, the plural is irregular and “men” doesn’t end in “s” so we need to add “s” to men.
28 wrz 2017 · Rule #1. For singular and plural nouns that don’t end in ‑s: noun + ’s. boy + ’s = boy’s. men + ’s = men’s. Rule #2. For singular nouns ending in ‑s: noun + ’s. class + ’s = class’s. Rule #3. For plural nouns ending in ‑s: nouns + ’. ladies + ’ = ladies’. Examples. Excuse me, do you know where the men’s room is?