No, the word "her" is not a noun. The word "her" is a pronoun.
The pronoun "her" is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a specific person or thing.
The personal pronoun "her" takes the place of a singular noun for a female as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Example: I saw her go into the office. I opened the door for her.
The pronoun "her" is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe a noun as belonging to a female.
Example: After entering the office, she removed her sunglasses.
The possessive pronoun form is hers, which takes the place of a noun that belongs to a female.
Example: The sunglasses on the counter must be hers.
A possessive noun is a noun that indicates something in the sentence belongs to that noun (used as an adjective modifying another noun, and telling you to whom or to what the modified noun belongs).
A noun shows possession by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the noun or adding just an apostrophe (') to the end of a plural noun that already ends with an s.
Example: I saw John's car in the library car lot.
The noun John is used as an adjective, telling you that the car you saw belongs to John.
No, "her" is not a possessive noun. "Her" is a pronoun used to indicate that something belongs to a female. Possessive nouns are typically formed by adding 's or just an apostrophe (') to a noun to show ownership.
No, the word "hers" is a possessive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to one female.
Example: Myra is picking me up. That blue car is hers.
Note: Possessive forms of pronouns do not use an apostrophe to indicate possession.
No. It is the possessive or objective form of the pronoun she.
"He" can function as a possessive pronoun (e.g., "This is his book"), but it is not a possessive noun on its own.
The possessive noun of Sam is Sam's.
The possessive noun for "diplomat" is "diplomat's." For example: The diplomat's speech was well-received.
The possessive form for the plural noun wives is wives'.
No, "she's" is a contraction of "she is" or "she has." It is not a possessive noun.
The possessive singular noun is explorer's. The possessive plural noun is explorers'.
The possessive form for the noun coyote is coyote's.
Yes, a possessive noun is a kind of noun; a possessive noun is a noun in the possessive case.Example:noun: treepossessive noun: the tree's leavesnoun: Robertpossessive noun: Robert's bicyclenoun: storypossessive noun: the story's end
The possessive noun of "preacher" is "preacher's."
The possessive form for the noun coyote is coyote's.
The possessive form is grandson's.
No, it is a singular possessive noun.
The singular possessive noun is Rex's.
The possessive form of the plural noun workers is workers'.The possessive noun phrase is: the workers'tools.
The possessive form for the noun monument is monument's.
No, "tomb" is a singular common noun, not a possessive noun.
The possessive form of the proper noun is Arturo's.The possessive noun phrase is: Arturo's baby sister.