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.
The possessive form of the singular noun speaker is speaker's.example: What is the speaker's name?
The possessive form of the singular noun speaker is speaker's.example: What is the speaker's name?
There is NO possessive noun in the sentence: All the traffic gave him fits.
No, a possessive noun functions in a sentence as an adjective describing a noun. The subject of a sentence that determines the verb is the noun that the possessive noun describes. Example: Jack's daughter is five. (the subject of the sentence is 'daughter') The Browns' daughter is five. (the possessive noun Browns' is plural, the subject of the sentence 'daughter' is singular, taking a verb for singular)
"Firefly's" is a singular possessive noun.
The singular possessive noun is stepchild's.
No, "tomb" is a singular common noun, not a possessive noun.
The singular noun is tooth.The singular possessive noun is tooth's.
The singular possessive form for the noun clock is clock's.
singular possessive form of each noun shown
The noun vest is the singular form.The noun vest's is the singular possessive form.
The possessive form for the singular noun wind is wind's.Example sentence: The wind's direction is to the northeast.