There are two types of possessive pronouns:
Possessive pronouns are words that take the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something.
The possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, hers, his, its, ours, theirs.
Possessive adjectives are words that are placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to someone or something.
The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.
Examples:
The house with the green door is mine.
My house has the green door.
The word 'both' is not a noun, the word 'both' is an indefinite pronoun, an adjective, or a conjunction. Examples:indefinite pronoun: Both are good but the raspberry is my favorite.adjective: Both puppies have new homes.conjunction: We visited both the Metropolitan Museum and the Guggenheim.
cadidate
their means that it belongs to someone and ther're means they areThere describes a location; 'Put the piano there' Their is the posessive of them; 'Their taxi's here' They're is the contraction of 'they are'; 'They're going to be late'
The plural form for the noun louse is lice; the plural possessive is lice's.
The pronoun her is an object pronoun; for example:We see her everyday.
The word its is a posessive pronoun.
The word 'both' is not a noun, the word 'both' is an indefinite pronoun, an adjective, or a conjunction. Examples:indefinite pronoun: Both are good but the raspberry is my favorite.adjective: Both puppies have new homes.conjunction: We visited both the Metropolitan Museum and the Guggenheim.
cadidate
Regions'
Years'
Uncles'
Painters'
their means that it belongs to someone and ther're means they areThere describes a location; 'Put the piano there' Their is the posessive of them; 'Their taxi's here' They're is the contraction of 'they are'; 'They're going to be late'
singular
The knife's edge had been dulled when it hit the rock. Knife's is singular posessive. The knives' edges had been dulled when they hit the rock. Knives' is plural posessive.
The possessive form would be "agency's."
The singular form of the noun is stapler. The singular posessive form of the noun would be stapler's. The plural form of the noun would be staplers. The plural posessive form of the noun would be staplers'