Look at the following Examples: Possessive Pronouns. I like your drawing. Do you like mine. My flowers have withered. Yours are lovely; Your photos are good. Mine are terrible. The words mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs are possessive pronouns. They show who or what something belongs to. Possessive Adjective:
The first thing to know about possessive pronouns is that they show ownership. They indicate who something belongs to. The second thing to remember is what pronouns do. The job of pronouns is to replace something. As you remember, subject and object pronouns replace subjects and objects: Does David drive that green car?
Furthermore, it is a āpossessiveā pronoun because it tells who owns, or possesses, the noun it is replacing. So far, we have been talking about the difference between the possessive adjective and the possessive pronoun. You will recall that in a previous lesson, you already learned about the possessive adjectives. mi (s) my.
Possessive adjectives give information about existing nouns in a sentence, for example: my hat, your coat, his father, her brother, our house, their car. Possessive pronouns, on the other hand, take the place of nouns altogether. My hat becomes mine , your coat becomes yours, his father becomes his, her brother becomes hers, our house becomes
Personal pronouns are short words used to replace yourself or a personās name, such as I, she, he, you, we, us and them. For example, read the sentence āAnita charged towards the dragon
Sometimes adjectives and pronouns look so similar that it can be easy to mix them up. Here are the main differences between them, and examples for each.
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possessive pronouns and possessive adjectives examples