No, the pronoun 'your' is a second person pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for the person spoken to.
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective, a word that takes the place of a possessive noun to describe something belonging to the person spoken to.
A third person pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun for the person spoken about.
The third person possessive adjectives are: his, her, its, their.
Examples:
Your mother is very nice. (second person, the mother of the person spoken to)
Have you met Jim's mother? His mother is very nice. (third person, the mother of the person spoken about)
The door needs repair. Its hinge is cracked. (third person, the hinge of the door spoken about)
In third person limited narration, are you allowed to use they, and them?
Maintaining consistent pronoun person means:if you are using the first person (the one speaking), you must use first person pronouns: I, me, we, us.if you are using the second person (the one spoken to), you must use the second person pronoun: you (used as singular or plural and subject or object)if you are using the third person (the one spoken about), you must use the third person pronouns: he, him, she, her, it, they, them.
The third person, singular subject pronouns are he, she, it.The third person, plural subject pronoun is they.The third person, singular object pronouns are him, her, it.The third person, plural object pronoun is them.
The third person point of view affects the credibility of the sources in academic writing because the person cites another source which is not credible. The third point of view is point is open to distortion.
has is not used with the pronouns we or youor I-so it is we/you/I/they have but never we/you/I/they has. He or she has but not have. _____________ Another way of explaining the same thing: it depends on person and number. The verb 'to have', present tense: .........................Singular: ........................Plural: First person:.......I have............................We have Second person:..You have .......................You have Third person:..... He has........................... They have The third person singular can also be 'she has', or 'it has'.
Third person uses the pronouns he, she, it, or they
In third person limited narration, are you allowed to use they, and them?
Third person POV uses the words "he," "she," "it," or "they." Don't use "I," "we," or "you."
"il" is always the third person of the singular
Third person POV uses the words "he," "she," "it," or "they."
Third person limited is almost the same as first person, only you use the third person pronouns he/she/it/they instead of I. You use that POV when you want to be inside the head of the narrator and show his or her emotions and thoughts, but nobody else's.
Third person POV uses the words "he," "she," "it," or "they."
The third person is the one (ones) spoken about. The third person personal pronouns are: he, him, she, her, it, they, them. The third person nouns are all nouns except nouns of direct address.
Has is used only in the third person singular (he, she, it), with I, we, you, they you use have.
Never. "Has" is third person. It's "You have" I have. You have. He/She/It has.
Use "does" when the subject is he, she, or it (third person singular), and use "do" for all other subjects (I, you, we, they, and all plural subjects). For example, "He does his homework" and "We do our chores."
First person pronouns like "I", "me", "my" should be avoided when writing in third person. Additionally, second person pronouns like "you" and possessive pronouns like "mine" are also not suitable for third person writing.