Possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns, like the adjectives, agree with the person to whom they refer. Singular and plural share the same form:
- I --> mine
- your --> yours
- he, she, it --> his (masculine), hers (feminine), its (impersonal)
- we --> ours
- they --> theirs
So,
- I have my likes, and she has hers.
- If you give me one of yours, I'll give you one of mine.
- I like our house, but frankly, I am jealous of theirs!
- That's mine!
The verb "to belong to" indicates ownership or possession:
- That poodle belongs to Louise.
- The world belongs to you.
One may add "--'s" to any noun in order to indicate possession:
- I just read Gustave's book.
- The front door's lock is broken.
- Many of the world's countries are poor.
Note: Do not confuse the "s" of possession with the contraction of the verb "is":
- Fred's going to fetch it. (= Fred is going to fetch it.)
- The train's late again. (=The train is late again.)
"Whose" will be placed before the possession (the object possessed), and will refer ownership to the preceding noun:
- The man whose dog bit me said he was sorry. (The dog belongs to the man.)
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