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What's an independent possessive

User Mark Hall
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Answer:

An independent possessive is an independent possessive that does not precede a noun, as in "It is my pencil", but stands alone: "It is mine". The independent possessive is only used when a possessor is a person.

Step-by-step explanation:

Mine, ours, yours, his, hers and theirs are the independent possessive pronouns. They are not immediately followed by a noun. You can think of them this way: they are independent because they don't need a noun after them.

Possessive pronouns show that something belongs to someone. The possessive pronouns are my, our, your, his, her, its, and their. There's also an “independent” form of each of these pronouns: mine, ours, yours, his, hers, its, and theirs. Possessive pronouns are never spelled with apostrophes.

Examples:

My phone is dead. Pass me yours.

Did you know that Labrador is mine?

The house on the corner is theirs.

Do you notice that all of the possessive nouns are at the end? That means it is an independent possessive.

Hope this helped!

User Jeremy McGibbon
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Answer:

An independent possessive does not precede a noun, as in "It is my pencil", but stands alone: "It is mine". The independent possessive is only used when the possessor is a person.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Zhech
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