A possessive verb is a verb that indicates ownership or possession. It shows that a subject has ownership or some form of control over something or someone. Examples of possessive verbs include "have," "own," and "possess."
There's no such thing as a singular possessive verb. Chris's is a singular possessive noun.
Him is not possessive. The possessive would be 'his'.
A possessive verb shows ownership or possession in a sentence, typically by indicating that the subject of the verb has or possesses something. For example, "John's car is red" - "John's" is a possessive form indicating that the car belongs to John.
The word 'are' is not a noun; not a possessive form. The word are is the plural, present tense conjugation of the verb to be.The word 'your' is the possessive adjective form of the second person pronoun 'you'.Example:John and Joan are your partners for the project. (the word 'are' is the verb; 'your partners' is the object of the verb)
No, a possessive noun functions in a sentence as an adjective describing a noun. The subject of a sentence that determines the verb is the noun that the possessive noun describes. Example: Jack's daughter is five. (the subject of the sentence is 'daughter') The Browns' daughter is five. (the possessive noun Browns' is plural, the subject of the sentence 'daughter' is singular, taking a verb for singular)
No it is not. My is a possessive pronoun.
"your" is NOT a verb, it is a possessive pronoun.
There's no such thing as a singular possessive verb. Chris's is a singular possessive noun.
Him is not possessive. The possessive would be 'his'.
A possessive verb shows ownership or possession in a sentence, typically by indicating that the subject of the verb has or possesses something. For example, "John's car is red" - "John's" is a possessive form indicating that the car belongs to John.
No. I = a pronoun am = be verb
The word 'are' is not a noun; not a possessive form. The word are is the plural, present tense conjugation of the verb to be.The word 'your' is the possessive adjective form of the second person pronoun 'you'.Example:John and Joan are your partners for the project. (the word 'are' is the verb; 'your partners' is the object of the verb)
Her is a possessive adjective, neither a noun, nor a verb.
Your is not a noun, not a verb; your is a pronoun, one of the possessive pronouns, the possessive adjective form.The possessive adjective your is used to describe a noun as belonging to you; for example:Your shoes look great with that outfit.
No, a possessive noun functions in a sentence as an adjective describing a noun. The subject of a sentence that determines the verb is the noun that the possessive noun describes. Example: Jack's daughter is five. (the subject of the sentence is 'daughter') The Browns' daughter is five. (the possessive noun Browns' is plural, the subject of the sentence 'daughter' is singular, taking a verb for singular)
he would is a pronoun + an auxiliary verb. As a verb cannot have case, you cannot make this phrase possessive. *his would is nonsensical. The closest you could get to a "possessive" is to find the noun root of would which is will. You could say his will. But its hardly the possessive equivalent
Only nouns and pronouns have possessive forms. The word 'write' is a verb.