He could be over-protective because hes afraid to lose you. When a guy is over-protective over a girl, its usually because he either has trust issues, or he loves you so much he's afraid to lose you, or both.
yes it is. when your boyfriend is possessive, it means he will find a way to little by little shut you out from the real world until you find yourself all alone, with no friends and no one to turn to. if you are with someone who is possessive, get out now.
The cast of Possessive Boyfriend - 2007 includes: Guy Fearon as Philip Sara Kessel as Julie Samia Rida as Fran
dump your boyfriend n go out wit luke
No, "him" is not a possessive pronoun. It is an objective pronoun used as the object of a verb or preposition. Possessive pronouns include "his" as a possessive form of "he."
The possessive question typically asks who or what owns or has something. It is used to determine ownership or belonging in a sentence. It is usually formed by adding an apostrophe and an "s" ('s) to a noun.
"He" can function as a possessive pronoun (e.g., "This is his book"), but it is not a possessive noun on its own.
Then you catch him alone. It might be hard though.
You know your your boyfriend should back off when he starts to get over-possessive or starts touching you wrong.
The word 'possessive' is a noun as a word for a grammatical form showing ownership, possession, purpose, or origin.The most common use of the word 'possessive' is as an adjective to describe a noun; example: She finally dumped her possessive boyfriend.
Well possessive boyfriend are hard to deal with it . If you have one then talk to him that how his possessiveness bothers you. And never give your address or land line number to a possessive boyfriend.You need to communicate how you feel to your boyfriend regarding his possessiveness towards you and stop enabling him from doing so. Tell him if he cannot trust you enough and is constantly overly possessive then you are ending the relationship. If you do not manage to curb his behavior it will only get worse until it is unbearable making you feel smothered and may even cost you some friends because of his behavior.
he would is a pronoun + an auxiliary verb. As a verb cannot have case, you cannot make this phrase possessive. *his would is nonsensical. The closest you could get to a "possessive" is to find the noun root of would which is will. You could say his will. But its hardly the possessive equivalent
Owner's IS the possessive for owner. The apostrophe and -S make it possessive. The possessive for the plural owners would be owners'