A possessive modifier is a possessive noun or a possessive adjective that indicates that a noun belongs to, is intended for, or originates from another noun for a person or thing in the sentence.
Examples of possessive nouns (indicated by the use of an apostrophe):
A possessive modifier is a possessive form of noun or pronoun added to another noun to show something other than possession. For example:John's books are in his locker. (the possessive form John's shows that the books belong to John)The dog's bowl is empty. (the possessive form dog's shows that the bowl belongs to the dog)These are examples of possessive nouns.A possessive modifier is a possessive form that shows something else:He ate the lion's share of the cake. (the share he ate didn't belong to a lion; the possessive form lion's means something different, it's a description for 'the largest' share of the cake)I received a volume of Kipling's poems. (The poems were written by Kipling, they don't belong to him)'Children's Shoes on Sale' (oh dear, I hope they're not selling shoes that belong to some children, no, the possessive form is used to say they're selling shoes meant to be worn by children)These are examples of possessive modifiers.
No, we is a pronoun, the first person plural personal pronoun. There is a possessive adjective, our, and a possessive pronoun, ours. Our is the only modifier.
No: "favorite" in the sentence given is a noun, specifically a predicate noun, as indicated by its possessive pronoun/functional adjective modifier "your"
An awkward modifier is a modifier that interrupts the flow of the sentence. =] A modifier that interrupts the flow of the sentence
APEX A limiting modifier is a modifier that limits the meaning of another word in the sentence
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A technical component modifier.
How you know is you have to read the whole sentence and to find out what a modifier is you have to know what a modifier is
squinting modifier is a modifier between two words both of which it could modify. sometimes it is also called a two-way modifier.
Kelly bought her sister a toy. "Kelly" is the subject, it does the action. "Bought" is the transitive verb, it's transitive because there's a direct object. "Her" is a modifier, a possessive adjective, and therefore not included in the pattern. "Sister" is the indirect object, it is who or what the toy is to or for. "A" is another modifier, an article adjective. "Toy" is the direct object, it is what is being bought.
My teacher is my personal modifier.
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