The possessive form for the noun passerby is passerby's.
The passerby did not stop to speak with him. She waved to the passerby.
A possessive pronoun shows ownership.
The Genitive Case shows possession or ownership!
A word in a noun phrase that shows ownership, origin, or purpose is:a possessive noun: the man's hat; McDonald's fries; a children'splayground.a possessive adjective: my sister; his barbecue ribs; their vacation photos.
Passerby is a compound word ending in by.
The word 'my' is a possessive adjective. It shows ownership or possession of something.
A noun that shows ownership using an apostrophe is a possessive noun.
A possessive pronoun shows ownership. The possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.
Own a Toyota, y'not? A palindrome that shows legal ownership of a Toyota vehicle.
Yes, the word its is the possessive adjective form for the pronoun it. Example:The peacock is a beautiful bird. Its feathers are long and brilliantly colored.
A word that shows ownership or belongings is either a:possessiveplural possessiveThe boy's mother arrived.The boys' mothers arrived.
The singular form is passerby; the plural for is passersby.