"My oldest brother's pet mice are as big as yours."
Its and yours are the possessive pronouns for it and you. Note that possessive pronouns do not use apostrophes.
That is incorrect. Pronouns do not use apostrophes to indicate possession; instead, they have their own possessive forms. For example, "his," "hers," "theirs," "yours," and "its" are possessive pronouns. Apostrophes are used for possessive nouns like "Mary's book" or "the dog's leash."
No, possessive pronouns do not have apostrophes. Examples of possessive pronouns include "mine," "yours," "his," "hers," "ours," and "theirs." Each of these words already indicates possession without needing an apostrophe.
That one's yours.
No, possessive case pronouns do not use an apostrophe.possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.possessive adjectives: my, your, our, his, her, their, its.Examples:The house on the corner is mine.My house is on the corner.
In this sentence, "yours" is a possessive pronoun. It is used to show that something does not belong to the person being addressed.
Sentence- THIS pen is mine and that one is yours.
Apostrophes are used to indicate possession: E.g. 'The dog's bone' = 'the bone which belongs to the dog'(except in his, hers, ours, yours (but including one's))Apostrophes are also used to show a contraction:E.g. 'I will not' = 'I won't''You have not' = 'you haven't''They would have' = 'they would've'(careful now it's = 'it is' or 'it has' whereas its= 'belonging to it' because 'its' is like 'his')Apostrophes are never used to make pluralssingular: Flowerplural: flowers (more than one flower)possessive: flower's (belonging to a flower)plural possessive: flowers' (belonging to multiple flowers)
At the end of the sentence.
'Sincerely yours, [insert name here]'
The correct way to say it is: "I am an avid fan of yours."
Yes, "apostrophe s" is used to indicate possessives, except in the possessive forms of "your" and "it", which would be expressed "yours" and "its" (no apostrophes). "It's" is a contraction of the words "it is".