Possessive tense is a grammatical construction used to show ownership or relationship. It typically involves adding an apostrophe and the letter "s" ('s) to a noun to indicate that something belongs to someone or something else. For example, in "Sarah's book," the possessive tense indicates that the book belongs to Sarah.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun. Pronouns don't have tense, only verbs have tenses. * The past tense of "you're" (you are) is "you were."
"Theirs" is a possessive pronoun that indicates ownership in the present tense.
"Are" is a verb used to indicate the present tense of the verb "to be," while "your" is a possessive pronoun used to show ownership or association with the person you are addressing. For example, "Are you coming to the party?" uses "are" as a verb, while "Is this your book?" uses "your" as a possessive pronoun.
Chinese is both singular and plural. Chinese is also an adjective, not a noun. Therefore there is no possessive tense. A Chinese man's purse. Now if you are looking for "eses".... Try female, plural possessive of Prince. Princesses'
"Peter's" is a possessive noun, indicating that something belongs to Peter.
"Their" is a possessive pronoun, not a verb. There cannot be a present tense for pronouns.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun. Pronouns don't have tense, only verbs have tenses. * The past tense of "you're" (you are) is "you were."
The word 'caught' is the past tense of the verbto catch. Verbs do not have a possessive form. Only nouns and pronouns have possessive forms.
There are three possessive tenses in English: the simple possessive (e.g., "John's car"), the possessive progressive (e.g., "John is fixing Mary's computer"), and the possessive perfect (e.g., "John has lost his keys"). The choice of tense depends on the context and the relationship between the possessors.
Our is a possessive determiner - not a verb- it can be used in past or present sentences. It is not past or present .They saw our dog on the road.They see our mother everyday.
No it is not. A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun. Instead of Dakota, a pronoun would be 'him' 'Had' is past tense possessive.
No, crept is the preterite (simple past tense) and past participle of the verb to creep.
Chinese is both singular and plural. Chinese is also an adjective, not a noun. Therefore there is no possessive tense. A Chinese man's purse. Now if you are looking for "eses".... Try female, plural possessive of Prince. Princesses'
The possessive form of the noun tower is tower's.Example: The tower's occupant is a maiden with long golden hair.
"Are" is a verb used to indicate the present tense of the verb "to be," while "your" is a possessive pronoun used to show ownership or association with the person you are addressing. For example, "Are you coming to the party?" uses "are" as a verb, while "Is this your book?" uses "your" as a possessive pronoun.
"Peter's" is a possessive noun, indicating that something belongs to Peter.
Troy = noun (proper noun) was = verb (linking verb; past tense) its = possessive adjective (some call this a "possessive pronoun") name = noun (common noun)