There is no possessive pronoun in the sentence.
The only possessive in the sentence is the possessive form for the proper noun Shackelton (Shackelton's story). The only pronoun in the sentence is "I" which is taking the place of the noun for the person speaking.
The word "his" is a possessive adjective, a pronoun placed before a noun to describe that noun (story) as belonging to a male.The word "he" is a subject pronoun, and "him" is an object pronoun.
The pronoun I would use to describe the O. Henry story "After Twenty Years" is the possessive pronoun his. It is his story, his appointment, his old friend, his downfall.
The second person pronouns are:you (personal pronoun)yours (possessive pronoun)your (possessive adjective)yourself, yourselves(reflexive pronouns)
This story is more remarkable (than the other one.)
The possessive form of story is story's. "The story's ending was very sad." The plural of story is stories. "I read all the stories in the series." The possessive form of stories is stories' "The stories' endings were all cliffhangers."
The singular possessive form is story's. And that's the story's end.
The pronoun in the sentence is it.The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'story'.
The word story's is the singular possessive form of the noun story.Example: We are at the story's end.
The plural of story is stories, and the plural possessive form is stories'.
The plural of story is stories, and the plural possessive form is stories'.
Yes, "story's" is the singular possessive form of the noun "story."
No, "story" is a singular noun. The plural form of "story" is "stories." The possessive form of "story" in singular form is "story's," while in plural form it is "stories'."