No, possessive words are nouns or pronouns.
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
A possessive noun or pronoun is a word that indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that person or thing.
A preposition is a word that connects a noun or a pronoun with another word in a sentence. A preposition usually comes in front of a noun or pronoun, telling its relation to another word in a sentence (words like of, for, in, on, with, to, from, etc.)
Examples:
No, "ours" is a pronoun. It is a possessive pronoun that shows ownership or belonging.
No, "our" is a possessive pronoun.
No, "him" is not a possessive pronoun. It is an objective pronoun used as the object of a verb or preposition. Possessive pronouns include "his" as a possessive form of "he."
No, it is not. It is a possessive adjective, third person singular. The related possessive pronoun is hers.
No, it is not. It is a possessive adjective, first person singular. (The related possessive pronoun is mine.)
No, "ours" is a pronoun. It is a possessive pronoun that shows ownership or belonging.
No, his is a possessive pronoun.
No, "our" is a possessive pronoun.
No, it is not. It is a possessive adjective, third person singular. The related possessive pronoun is hers.
No. To is a preposition. A possessive noun usually has an apostrophe (') eg dog's, doctor's
No, it is not. It is a possessive adjective, first person singular. (The related possessive pronoun is mine.)
No. It is a possessive form of the personal pronoun they.
Me is thhe object of the preposition. My is a possessive pronoun
The nouns in the sentence are:Frank's (possessive form), part of subject noun phrasecall, subject of the sentencehouse, object of the preposition 'to'Sue's (possessive form), part of object of the preposition 'about' noun phraseaccident, object of the preposition 'about'The only pronoun in the sentence is 'his', a possessive adjective describing the noun 'house'.
Some words for prepositions include: in, on, at, over, under, between, beside, and behind.
Of is a preposition.
It is a pronoun. It is used as a possessive, like an adjective: This house is ours.