The possessive form for the singular noun relative is relative's.
Example: I borrowed my relative's boat for the afternoon.
Relative's
The word 'which' is a pronoun and an adjective.The pronoun 'which' is a relative pronoun or an interrogative pronoun, not a possessive pronoun.Adjectives do not have a possessive form.
The word 'whose' is an interrogative pronoun and relative pronoun.The pronoun 'whose' is the possessive form for 'who' or 'which'.EXAMPLESinterrogative pronoun: Whose book did you borrow? (possessive of 'who')relative pronoun: The book whose cover is missing is mine. (possessive of 'which')
The form who's is not the possessive form for the pronoun who.The correct possessive form is whose.Example: Whose job is this? The one whose job it is is the busboy.The form who's is a contraction, a shortened form of the pronoun 'who' and the verb 'is'.Example: Who is that girl? --> Who's that girl?The word who is a pronoun; an interrogative pronoun that introduces a question; a relative pronoun that introduces a relative clause.
Yes, the pronoun 'whose' is the possessive form interrogative and relative pronoun.An interrogative pronoun introduces a question.Example: Whose car is in our driveway?A relative pronoun introduces a relative clause.Example: The one whose car is in the drive is the contractor.
The possessive form of the pronoun 'who' is whose.Example as interrogative pronoun:Who parked in our driveway?Whose car is in our driveway?Example as relative pronoun:The one who parked in our driveway is the contractor.The one whose car is in the driveway is the contractor.
The possessive noun for relative is: relative's"My friend lives up the road. One of my relatives lives down the road. My relative's house is the white one on the corner."
The plural is relatives. The plural possessive is relatives'.
Yes, the pronoun 'whose' is the possessive form of 'who'.The pronouns 'who' and 'whose' are both interrogative pronouns and relative pronoun.Example as interrogative pronoun:Who parked in our driveway?Whose car is in our driveway?Example as relative pronoun:The one who parked in our driveway is the painter.The one whose car is in the driveway is the painter.
The possessive form of the pronoun "who" is "whose".Possessive forms of pronouns do not use an apostrophe, the pronoun itself is the possessive form.The pronoun "whose" functions as an interrogative and a relativepronoun.EXAMPLESWhose job is cleaning the lunchroom? (interrogative use, introduces a question)The one whose job it is to clean the lunchroom is posted on this schedule. (relative use, introduces a relative clause)
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The possessive form is subsidiary's.