The word 'convulsive' is an adjective used to describe.
Example: My friend's convulsive reaction told me that I'd made the tea too bitter.
The speaker, the first person, will not use their name (a noun) when speaking in the first person; they will use a first person pronoun. The first person singular possessive pronoun is mine; the first person singular possessive adjective is my.Some people use their name when speaking in the first person, but usually that is for effect, and the speaker is speaking about them self in the third person. So, normally, a first person singular possessive noun is not used.
For one DVD, use the singular possessive form 'the DVD's case'. For two or more DVDs, use the plural possessive form, 'the DVDs' case'.
No, it's is a contraction of it is or it has. The possessive form of it is "its."Possessive pronouns don't use an apostrophe to indicate possession, the pronoun itself is the possessive form.If you're not sure which form to use, try the sentence with "it is" instead. If it makes sense, use "it's"; otherwise use "its". For example, which is correct? "The wind changed it's direction." or "... its direction."? If you change to "it is", the sentence becomes "The wind changed it is direction." which is nonsense grammatically. That means the correct wording is "The wind changed its direction."
The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding -'s: Alexis's. If Alexis's seems awkward to you, you may use the Frenchified possessive "of Alexis," but never use the plural possessive form, which is to add an apostrophe after the final -s of the plural, for a singular noun.
The singular possessive form for the noun brush is brush's.
The word he's is a singular contraction, not a possessive form.The contraction he's is a shortened form of the pronoun 'he' and the verb 'is'.The contraction he's functions as a subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence or a clause.The possessive form of the personal pronoun he is his.Pronouns that function as possessives do not use an apostrophe.Examples:He is my brother. Or: He's my brother. (contraction)The house on the corner is his. (possessive pronoun)His house is on the corner. (possessive adjective)
The possessive singular of all English nouns is formed by adding-'s: actress's. The use of an apostrophe alone is reserved for PLURAL possessives.
Series is a noun that has the same form in the singular and the plural. There is no need for an apostrophe, unless it is in the possessive case: series's for the singular possessive and series' for the plural possessive.
No. Plural possessive is "their" Possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe.
The noun 'tourist' is a singular, common gender noun, a word for a male or a female. There is no singular, common gender, possessive pronoun to take the place of 'tourist' in a sentence. The preferred choice is to use the plural, common gender, possessive pronoun theirs rather than the awkward 'his/hers'. Example:We sometimes rent our cabana to a tourist. The responsibility for housekeeping is theirs.Alternate choices are:use the possessive adjective: Housekeeping is their responsibility.use the possessive noun: Housekeeping is the tourist's responsibility.
You use "their" when referring to a group of people or when the gender is unknown. You use "his" when referring to a singular male and "her" when referring to a singular female.
The art piece was singular in its kind.