yes
yes, when this weekend?
If there is one coach, the phrase is "the coach's name is...." If there are multiple coaches, the phrase is "the coaches' names are..."
It depends, actually, if it's: Coach's meeting - one coach's meeting Coaches' meeting - many coaches' meeting Coaches meeting - just a meeting of coaches.
If there's one coach, possessive is coach's. If there are many coaches, possessive is coaches'.
It can be, to coach or a coach.
2008 season coaches: Manager - Joe Girardi Rob Thomson - Bench Coach Tony Pena - First Base Coach Bobby Meacham - Third Base Coach Kevin Long - Hitting Coach Mike Harkey -Bullpen Coach Dave Eiland - Pitching Coach
Bob Stoops, Oklahoma won a national championship in his second season
coaches
The correct spelling is "coach's award." In this context, "coach's" is a possessive form indicating that the award belongs to the coach. The apostrophe before the "s" shows that the award is possessed by the coach.
It depends, actually, if it's: Coach's meeting - one coach's meeting Coaches' meeting - many coaches' meeting Coaches meeting - just a meeting of coaches.
An NFL team has ten coaches per team. These include the head coach, defensive coordinator, offensive coordinator, quarterback coach, offensive line coach, defensive line coach, special teams coach, linebacker coach, strength coach, and secondary coach.
The plural form of the noun coach is coaches.Nouns ending in ch, sh, s, x, and z add -es to the end of the word to form the plural.Example: The coaches are meeting to set the schedule for the track.