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 singular possessive form of "speaker" is "speaker's."
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, possessive nouns do not affect subject-verb agreement. Subject-verb agreement is about ensuring that the subject and verb in a sentence match in terms of number (singular or plural). Possessive nouns simply indicate ownership of something by someone.
The singular possessive noun is stepchild's.
"Firefly's" is a singular possessive noun.
No, "tomb" is a singular common noun, not a possessive noun.
singular possessive form of each noun shown
The singular noun is tooth.The singular possessive noun is tooth's.
Yes, "vest's" is the singular possessive form of the noun "vest."
The singular possessive form for the noun sculptor is sculptor's.
The possessive form for the singular noun wind is wind's.Example sentence: The wind's direction is to the northeast.