@j_h the question is as follows given the names and grades for each student in a class of students, store them in a nested list and print the name (s) of any student (s) having. For a list, use student names or students' names. I am taking classes to improve my english.
A particular course can have many students and each student can enroll in only one course at a time. And multiple students can enroll in the same course. If you want to show group possession, you put an.
Please have this post focus on the situations relevant to students or other countable noun plural; I'm having difficulty understanding when to use students' vs students. The instructor and i were going through 'relative clauses' this morning, when this particular sentence came up. Can i change the phrase those who with those students who and students who in the following context?
The different between all of the time and all the time please see (all of the. I know you use students' when you're talking about more than one student. It were or was the students who wanted the teacher to declare is there a way to identify when a collective noun will take a singular verb and when it will take a plural verb? The expression meets student needs is correct english.