The noun 'mine' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an excavation in the earth for extracting coal or other minerals (a place); a type of bomb placed on or just below the surface of the ground or in the water (a thing).
The noun forms of the verb to mine are miner and the gerund, mining.
The word 'mine' is also a possessive pronoun.
The noun form is infallibility.
The noun form of the adjective 'modest' is modestness.A related noun form is modesty.
The noun form of the adjective 'various' is variousness.A related noun form is variety.
The noun form of the adjective 'precise' is preciseness.A related noun form is precision.
The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'thief' is thievery.The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'infant' is infancy.The abstract noun form of the concrete noun 'coward' is cowardice.The abstract noun form of the adjective 'urgent' is urgency.
The word mine is a possessive pronoun, a word that shows ownership of an antecedent. Example sentence:The car with the butterfly on the antenna is mine.The word mine is also a noun; the possessive form for the noun is mine's; for example the mine's entrance.
No, the noun 'mine' is a singular, common noun; a word for an excavation in the earth for extracting coal or other minerals. The possessive form for the noun mine is mine's. Example: The mine's entrance was boarded up.The word 'mine' is also a possessive pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun that belongs to me. Example: The house on the corner is mine.
The possessive form of "mine" is "mine's." However, it is more common to use "my" as a possessive pronoun instead of using the possessive form of "mine." For example, "This book is mine" can be rephrased as "This is my book."
The proper noun for possessive pronoun 'mine' is the possessive form of name of the person speaking. If your name is Mary, the proper noun would be Mary's. When you are referring to yourself, you don't normally use your own name. If someone asks, 'Whose book is this?' You would not answer, 'The book is Mary's.' You would answer, 'The book is mine.' The proper noun for common noun 'mine' as a word for a place to dig for coal, is the name of a specific mine, such as the Antelope Coal Mine in Wyoming.
The word stope is a noun and a verb. The noun stope is a form of mining in successive layers, especially for mining a vertical deposit. The verb stope is to mine in this way.
The word mine is a pronoun, not a noun. It is the possessive, objective pronoun meaning belonging to me.
Yes, "mine" is a possessive pronoun used to show ownership. It is not a common noun, which is a general, non-specific noun.
The word 'my' is a pronoun called a possessive adjective, a word used to describe a noun as belonging to the person speaking.The possessive noun is the possessive form of the noun or the name of the person speaking.Examples:The teacher said, "Please put your essays on mydesk".I put my essay on the teacher's desk.I put my essay on Ms. Marker's desk.
This mine is mine. Let's mine this lode!
"Mine" is a special form possessive pronoun, used in modern English only when the possessive pronoun is separated from the noun it modifies by a verb form or by enough words to make the connection between the possessive pronoun and the noun that it modifies otherwise obscure. Examples: That is my book, and that pen is mine also. (separated by verb in the second independent clause) Her coat is red, but mine is blue. ("mine" is separated from the word it modifies, coat, by the three-word phrase "is red, but". All of the normal possessive case pronouns that do not end in the letter "s" have special form possessive pronouns of this type: yours, hers, ours, and theirs. "Mine" can also be: a regular verb, meaning to extract naturally occurring minerals from the Earth; or a noun, meaning either a place where the activity of mining is or has been carried on or a type of weapon that triggers an explosion when touched by sufficient pressure. The noun can also be used as a "substantive adjective", as in the phrases "mine safety" or "mine gases".
Antecedents can be any noun (or noun form) where pronouns will replace the repetition of the noun. The most common pronouns that replace antecedents are personal pronouns (I, me, he, she, it, we they) or possessive adjectives (my, your, his, her, its) or possessive pronouns (his, hers, theirs, mine, yours).
The noun form for the adjective horrible is horribleness.