My polo shirt has a collar.
The police detective made an arrest and he now has 5 collars this week.
Also: I bought a new collar for my dog.
houses
Oh, I don't know.. My cat's collar has a bell on it. His cat's collar is very colourful. Simple, but true to the question.
You need to get a new collar for your dog.The prepositional phrase in the sentence is "for your dog."'Dog' is the object of the preposition 'for'.
He adjusted his collar before heading into the meeting.
my uncle is a white collar worker because he works in an office.
It's is used to resemble "it is" so you would use it like "It's a new car!" Its is the possession form, if something is "the dog's collar" you would say "Its collar". Easiest way to differentiate is just test the sentence with "it is" to determine which form to use.
"The dog has its own collar" is grammatically correct. Many people mistakenly use "it's" in this kind of sentence, but that is the contraction for "it is," not the possessive form of "it."
Its collar is so tight that it's funny.
shirt is to collar as necklace is to pendant.
no
yes
Paul makes a squirrel's silver collar