No, the pronoun 'hers' is a third personpronoun, the one spoken about. The third person pronouns are:
The first person is the one speaking. The first person pronouns are:
The remaining person is the second person, the one spoken to. The second person pronouns are:
The pronoun 'hers' is the third person, singular, possessive pronoun. Example sentence:Jane has a new car that she said is red, this onemust be hers.Note: a possessive pronoun replaces the noun for something that belongs to someone or something, not the noun that it belongs to. If the sentence read, '...her red car', the word 'her' is an adjective pronoun to describe car and does take the place of the noun for the owner.
Third person personal pronoun, feminine, accusative
First person singular: my (possessive adjective), mine (possessive pronoun)Second person siingular: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person singular: his, her, its (possessive adjectives), his, hers, its (possessive pronouns)First person plural: our (possessive adjective), ours (possessive pronoun)second person plural: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person plural: their (possessive adjective), theirs (possessive pronoun)
No, hers is already a possessive pronoun. No apostrophe is needed.
The word 'she' is the nominative case, a subjective pronoun. The corresponding objective pronoun is 'her'; and the possessive form is hers.
The pronoun 'hers' is the third person, singular, possessive pronoun. Example sentence:Jane has a new car that she said is red, this onemust be hers.Note: a possessive pronoun replaces the noun for something that belongs to someone or something, not the noun that it belongs to. If the sentence read, '...her red car', the word 'her' is an adjective pronoun to describe car and does take the place of the noun for the owner.
Third person personal pronoun, feminine, accusative
Hers is a pronoun.
First person singular: my (possessive adjective), mine (possessive pronoun)Second person siingular: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person singular: his, her, its (possessive adjectives), his, hers, its (possessive pronouns)First person plural: our (possessive adjective), ours (possessive pronoun)second person plural: your (possessive adjective), yours (possessive pronoun)Third person plural: their (possessive adjective), theirs (possessive pronoun)
No, hers is already a possessive pronoun. No apostrophe is needed.
The word 'she' is the nominative case, a subjective pronoun. The corresponding objective pronoun is 'her'; and the possessive form is hers.
The word hers is a pronoun. It is that which belongs to her.
The pronoun she is singular, a third person singular pronoun, used as a subject. (The object form is hers.) The plural third person pronoun is they, used as a subject. Examples: Where is the girl? She is at the store. Where are the girls? They are at the store.
The possessive adjective your is a second person pronoun.
Hers is the equivalent for the pronoun his.
No, "hers" is not a preposition. It is a pronoun that shows possession, similar to "his" or "its."
Hers is a pronoun.