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Examples of Possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns
Pronouns are the stunt doubles of the English language. They keep communication going with or without the nouns. Pronouns come in to keep nouns from getting repetitive or when nouns are not clearly known. They do more work than you think, so read on to learn about them.
Possessive pronouns show who owns something described in a sentence. They include mine, his, hers, its, ours, yours, their, and theirs. Possessive adjectives are similar to possessive pronouns. However, the possessive adjective comes before the object of the sentence; the possessive pronoun is the object of the sentence. See the difference here:
That is my dog. (possessive adjective, before the object "dog")
The dog is mine. (possessive pronoun, which is the object)
Examples of possessive pronouns:
mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, whose
That computer is hers.
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Possessive pronouns show who owns something described in a sentence. They include mine, his, hers, its, ours, yours, their, and theirs. Possessive adjectives are similar to possessive pronouns. However, the possessive adjective comes before the object of the sentence; the possessive pronoun is the object of the sentence. See the difference here:
That is my dog. (possessive adjective, before the object "dog")
The dog is mine. (possessive pronoun, which is the object)
Examples of possessive pronouns:
mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, whose
That computer is hers.
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To share this example, copy and paste this code into your website, blog or forum:
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