A possessive noun is a form to show that something belongs to that noun. A possessive noun is formed by adding an 's to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe to the end of a plural noun that already ends with s. Example:
Belongs is a verb; pronouns replace nouns, not verbs. The noun form for belongs is belonging. Examples:The verb: That coat belongs to me.The noun: That coat is my belonging.The possessive pronoun: My belonging is on the floor because it's hanger broke.
No, he is a subjective personal pronoun. The possessive pronoun that shows something belongs to a male is 'his'.
The possessive form of the personal pronoun 'he' is his.The possessive pronoun 'his' takes the place of a noun that belongs to a male.Example: The house on the corner is his.The possessive adjective 'his' is placed before a noun to show that the noun belongs to a male.Example: He painted his house blue.
The possessive pronoun for the term possessive pronoun is its. Example:A possessive pronoun is useful because itsfunction is to show that a noun in a sentence belongs to something.
The word its is the possessive. It is singular and does not require an apostrophe when it's possessive. The plural form is their.
belongs
The possessive form for "that leash belongs to a dog" is "That is a dog's leash."
I
Belongs is a verb; pronouns replace nouns, not verbs. The noun form for belongs is belonging. Examples:The verb: That coat belongs to me.The noun: That coat is my belonging.The possessive pronoun: My belonging is on the floor because it's hanger broke.
The possessive form is Jim's eraser.
The word meaning 'belongs to them' is their.Example: Jack and Jill have invited us to their party.The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to show that noun belongs to 'them'.Possessive adjectives do not have an apostrophe.The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.
This book belongs to her.
No, he is a subjective personal pronoun. The possessive pronoun that shows something belongs to a male is 'his'.
The possessive noun form is: in my mother's car
No, a possessive pronoun is not placed before the noun for something that belongs to someone or something.A possessive adjective is placed before a noun that belongs to someone or something.Examples:The red bicycle is mine. (possessive pronoun)My bicycle is new. (possessive adjective)
The possessive form of the personal pronoun 'he' is his.The possessive pronoun 'his' takes the place of a noun that belongs to a male.Example: The house on the corner is his.The possessive adjective 'his' is placed before a noun to show that the noun belongs to a male.Example: He painted his house blue.
Possessive words - his, her, our - or possessive forms - John's, doctor's, - are used to show that some thing 'belongs' to someone or something eg John's sister -- the sister 'belongs to John The doctor's car -- the car belongs to the doctor. Our cat -- the cat belongs to us