If they wanted to, they could do so. That is their own choice. The fact that they have epilepsy won't necessarily affect that.
you just have to find all twelve of hers before there is too much smoke
No, the pronoun 'hers' is a third personpronoun, the one spoken about. The third person pronouns are:he, she, it, they, him, her, them, his, hers, its, theirs, their, himself, herself, itself, themselves.The first person is the one speaking. The first person pronouns are:I, we, me, us, mine, my, ours, our, myself, ourselves.The remaining person is the second person, the one spoken to. The second person pronouns are:you, yours, your, yourself.
yes she smoke she even ask a permission to smoke in big boss house and demands cigarettes for smoking but she did not get bad luck for her good luck for health that suffers from this habit of hers
Yes I know one hole entire song of hers "Swag it out"
his/hers Dying words.
an entrepreneuer is a person who own his/hers own business.
Traitor.
Use 'a picture of her' when referring to a portrait or photograph of the person. Use 'a picture of hers' when referring to a picture that she owns.
The third-person pronouns in English areSingularhe, she, it - subjectivehim, her, it - objectivehis, hers, its - possessivePluralthey - subjectivethem - objectivetheirs - possessiveA sentence with a bunch of these is "He told them that it was hers, not his."
In Spanish, "suya" is a possessive adjective for the third person, like saying "of his" or "of hers".
The possessive adjective your is a second person pronoun.
Epilepsi is very different for different people so it all depends on how severe hers is and how the medicine affect her and if she takes it as she should. She should speak to her doctor and lawyer.