No, it has no possessive pronoun but its is a possessive determiner.The dog has lost its bone.
The possessive adjective for the personal pronoun it is its (NO apostrophe!).The possessive adjective for the personal pronoun he is his.examples:That dog may be a stray because its collar is missing.Jonathan rode his bicycle to school.
No, her dog is a phrase.However her is a possessive pronoun
One dog has a dog's collar.
The homophone for the contraction it's (it is) is its, the possessive pronoun, possessive adjective form of the personal pronoun it.Examples:I think it's time to go.The dog has hurt its paw.You may be referring to the possessive pronoun its and the contraction it's.The possessive form of the personal pronoun it is its.The contraction for the subject pronoun it and the verb is is it's.Examples:The dog is wagging its tail.It's a friendly dog. (It is a friendly dog.)
The noun dog's is the singular possessive form (one dog, one collar).The plural possessive form is dogs' (The dogs' leather collars).
One dog has a dog's collar.
The term 'ears of a dog' is 'a dog's ears'.
The possessive form for the noun dog is dog's.Example sentence: The dog's collar has the dog's name in rhinestones.
Her as an adjective is called a possessive adjective. The related possessive pronoun is hers, and the word her can also be a pronoun (they saw her) and colloquially a noun (The dog is a her -- also seen as The dog is a she.)
Her as an adjective is called a possessive adjective. The related possessive pronoun is hers, and the word her can also be a pronoun (they saw her) and colloquially a noun (The dog is a her -- also seen as The dog is a she.)
The possessive form is the possessive adjective (a pronoun) its.The possessive adjective is describing the dog's tail as the tail belonging to it: its tail.