The possessive form in this sentence would be "children's," as in "all of the children's memory book."
In the sentence "Her book is on the table," the word "her" is the possessive pronoun being used as an adjective to describe the noun "book."
children's booksChildren is a plural noun so the apostrophe follows the 'n'.
Possessive pronouns show ownership or possession of a noun in a sentence. They replace a noun and indicate who or what it belongs to. Examples include "my," "your," "his," "her," "its," "our," and "their."
The pronoun in that sentence is "his".
No. It's a possessive noun == ==
The pronoun in the sentence is her, a possessive adjective describing the book as 'belonging to her'.
Possessive nouns are used in a sentence to show ownership or possession, or purpose or origin.EXAMPLESshowing ownership: Jack's car is new.showing possession: The team's locker-room was a real mess.showing purpose: You'll find children's shoes on the left.showing origin: I picked up a copy of today'spaper.
The teenager's mother was so possessive of her that she never let her go out with her friends on the weekends."A possessive apostrophe shows ownership of an object"Possessive means to own so the president's birthday has a possessive apostrophe before the s as it is the president's birthday day. (u can use the first sentence or make up your own.
Example sentence: Mine is the house with the blue door.
Possessive pronouns are used as pronouns, taking the place of a noun that belongs to someone or something. The possessive pronouns are: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.Example sentence: John lost his math book, this book must be his.Pronouns also act as adjectives, describing a noun as belonging to someone or some thing. The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, their, its.Example sentence: John lost his math book; this must be his book.
A possessive subject refers to a noun or pronoun that shows ownership or belonging to someone or something. It is used to indicate that something belongs to the subject of the sentence. Example: "Sara's book" - the possessive subject is "Sara" showing that the book belongs to her.
The book's spine cracked as she opened it.