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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Possesive case

What doesi mean by possesive case?
  

Top answer

Possessive case. The words my, his, her, our, your, their, and its , and words with apostrophes like Sara's, Tom's, people's, sister's, and sisters' are said to be "in the possessive case". They appear before nouns.

  • Possessive case.
  • The words my, his, her, our, your, their, and its , and words with apostrophes like Sara's, Tom's, people's, sister's, and sisters' are said to be "in the possessive case".
  • They appear before nouns.
  • ( my wallet, your brother, Tom's house, the president's office ) CJ
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1 Answers
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Possessive case.

The words my, his, her, our, your, their, and its, and words with apostrophes like Sara's, Tom's, people's, sister's, and sisters' are said to be "in the possessive case". They appear before nouns. (my wallet, your brother, Tom's house, the president's office)

CJ

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