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  2. Grammatically, the possessive pronoun his is used because you are saying you are the object of his friendship. I am a friend of him. This is a much less common phrase, and can also be expressed as I am a friend to him. It may not mean that you have ever spoken to him. (Although often you will have.)

  3. Possessive pronouns and verb with -ing form [duplicate]

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/65894

    A good reference from Washington State University's page. Verb forms ending in “-ing” can function as nouns and are sometimes preceded by pronouns. Such verb/noun forms are called “gerunds.”. You’ll often see sentences like this: “I didn’t appreciate him returning the car with the gas tank empty.”. But “returning” is a ...

  4. Pronouns: when to use possessive vs reflexive

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/99818

    1. You use a possessive pronoun to replace a possessive determiner (eg my) and a noun: This is my hat -> This is mine. You use a reflexive pronoun when the object (direct,indirect or attached with a preposition) of the verb is the same as the subject: I fell off my bike and hurt myself - direct. I bought myself a new hat.- indirect.

  5. Possessive pronoun vs definite article in this sentence

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/305666

    1. In some languages, such as French and Spanish, it's ungrammatical or at least uncommon to use possessive pronouns to refer to parts of the body in some contexts: People say "the head," "the face" to refer to their own face, at least in some circumstances or kinds of constructions. But when the noun as an object is not a body part, possessive ...

  6. Is it correct to say: "This is his / its."? (Possessive Pronouns)

    ell.stackexchange.com/.../is-it-correct-to-say-this-is-his-its-possessive-pronouns

    According to what I know now about Possessive Pronouns, we can to choose between one of the two following forms: 1) "This is your book" vs "This is yours" 2) "This is their book" vs "This is theirs" 3) "This is her book" vs "This is hers" 4) "This is our book" vs "This is ours" 5) "This is my book" vs "This is mine"

  7. Collective Nouns and their possessive pronouns

    ell.stackexchange.com/.../253792/collective-nouns-and-their-possessive-pronouns

    The word 'crowd', being a collective noun, can take a singular verb when the members of the group are doing the same thing at the same time. Then, what about its possessive pronoun? Should it be its or their ? This site (dummies.com) says "Body parts always belong to individuals, not to groups."

  8. Which case of pronouns should be used with prepositions?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/45981

    We need a accusative case of pronoun after a preposition. Yes, the right form is "with him", not "with he". There are many kind of pronouns like personal pronoun, demonstrative pronoun, relative pronoun etc. Pronouns regardless of their classification can occur after preposition. The thing that needs to take care of is the case of a pronoun ...

  9. possessive pronouns - Which one is correct : ' this house is...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/262476/which-one-is-correct-this-house-is...

    Pronouns Unlike with other noun phrases which only have a single possessive form, personal pronouns in English have two possessive forms: possessive determiners (used to form noun phrases such as "her success") and possessive pronouns (used in place of nouns as in "I prefer hers", and also in predicative expressions as in "the success was hers").

  10. As I've mentioned, this phenomenon is called “singular they,” where we use the pronouns they, them, and their — which are normally third-personal plural pronouns — as third-person singular pronouns in the case where the speaker does not know the gender or preferred pronouns of the referred person. This is often done for people, who ...

  11. His vs His (possessive adjective vs possessive pronoun)?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/107718

    No. "The black car next to the bakery is hers." It's the possessive pronoun. In general, the possessive adjective is used when directly modifying a noun, and the possessive pronoun is used when it is either the subject or the direct object of the sentence. More examples: Adjective: His life is full of adventure. (Her life is full of adventure.)