They both had apples; he ate his right away, but she saved hers for later.
To antedate is to occur prior to something else. An example sentence would be: Her older brother's birth was an antedate to hers.
Hers is a pronoun.
Work and joy are nouns. Remember that the definition of a noun is "a person, place, or thing." Work is a thing, in this instance. Joy is a feeling, also a thing.Both hers in this sentence are pronouns.
Simply put, we use pronouns to replace nouns. Nouns or pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence or clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.When I pointed out Jim and his sisters, I was pointing at him and them.
Assuming that Judy is a female, the pronoun to take the place of the noun Judy is she as subject of a sentence or clause, her as the object of a verb or a preposition; the possessive pronoun hers, and the possessive adjective her, both show that something in the sentence belongs to Judy.
Hers in a sentence: That's not yours, it's hers. That blanket is hers. That coat is hers. get the picture? It's used when something belongs to a female usually.
Don't take Sarah's glue stick - it's not hers.
One eye of hers had an abnormally large eyelash.
I married a woman. She is now my spouse and I am hers.
the phrase would be "of victory"
The third-person pronouns in English areSingularhe, she, it - subjectivehim, her, it - objectivehis, hers, its - possessivePluralthey - subjectivethem - objectivetheirs - possessiveA sentence with a bunch of these is "He told them that it was hers, not his."
Our hands were together, but my hand was overlapping hers.
Example sentence: Everything is hers, nothing is mine.
The possessive noun in the sentence is "Jo's." It shows that the homework belongs to Jo.
Example sentence - The pirate wore an earring even though he looked silly with it. Michelle found an earring that wasn't hers on her bedroom floor.
You can use the word "her" to refer to a female person or possession in a sentence. For example: "I gave her the book" or "That is her house."
Good one!! (g) "their" IS multiple (plural) The singular forms of "their" are: "his", "hers", and "its". "their" is just a crummy, clumsy, grammatically incorrect way to avoid saying "his" in a sentence when the talker really means, "hers and his".