yes
Yes..If they paid you for the vehicle it now belongs to them..Other than that if you're paid up then the car belongs to you.
Anything that belongs to you
A car can be repossessed if the payments are not being made. It really doesn't matter whether it was bought by one person or two. The car dealer just wants to be paid.
Its on record, Its on record,
The word belongs is not a noun (nouns show possession), it's a verb Belongs is the third person singular, present for of the verb 'to belong'.
There as a location. Their as a possession. Bob is over there. This purse belongs to their neighbor.
After a repo you have the right to get your belongs out of the car and your tag off the car.
f the noun is pluraland already ends in s, add an apostropheafter the s to show possession. Thefrogs’ skin is mottled. = the skin belongs to the frogs. Apostrophes for plural possession
It denotes possession. For example: The cat's milk. This shows that the milk belongs to the cat.
An apostrophe is used to show possession, for example:The car belongs to Chris. It is Chris's car.This book belongs to Margie. This is Margie's book.I have a photo of the house of the pastor. I have a photo of the pastor's house.The house has a blue door. The house's door is blue.
Yes. When the vehicle is repossessed it no longer belongs to you and there is no requirement to tell you where it will be stored.
The apostrophe before the "s" can indicate possession or contraction. In possessive forms, it shows that something belongs to someone or something else (e.g., "John's book" means the book belongs to John). In contractions, it indicates the omission of letters, such as in "don't" (short for "do not").