Possessive means showing ownership or control over something. It is used to indicate that something belongs to or is associated with a particular person or thing.
No, "him" is not a possessive pronoun. It is an objective pronoun used as the object of a verb or preposition. Possessive pronouns include "his" as a possessive form of "he."
"He" can function as a possessive pronoun (e.g., "This is his book"), but it is not a possessive noun on its own.
The singular possessive form is headdress's. The plural possessive form is headdresses'.
The possessive form of "he" is "his": He did his homework after dinner.
I think you mean "possessive" pronouns. Possessive pronouns include my, your, his, her, their, our and its. Examples: "My car is over there." "Your car is over there." "His car is over there." etc.
If you mean the village of Bady in the county of Elblag Germany, the possessive form is Bady's (Bady's streets).If you mean the word body, the possessive form is body's(the body's temperature).If you mean the word baby, the possessive form is baby's(the baby's mother).
what does possessive noun mean
it means possessive
Calve is a verb, not a noun. Perhaps you mean calf, for which the plural possessive is calves'
no is the possessive particle as in 's
The possessive form is weaver's.
Don't know what possive means. Maybe you mean possessive?If you mean possessive then add 's to the noun: colonist'sThe colonist's houses were demolished in the storm.
sets' would mean plural possessive.
To be possessive is to want complete attention of somthing or someone. A guy who gets jelouse because his girlfriend is simply talking to another of her friend would be concidered possessive.
He = I have, as in I have done something (Not possessive, but auxiliary.)
"Nuestra" is the feminine form of "our".
'votre' is the possessive translated by 'your' in English.