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How do you say your English?

Yours: yours; His: his; Her; ; Its its (his, hers): theirs; ; Mine: mine? Mine.

Is that your bike? Is that your bike?

When adjectives are used to modify nouns, the adjective subject pronoun should be placed in front of the adjective. For example:

His English book, his English book. Their friends in China, their friends in China.

Although pronouns use "I" and "you", their actual meanings are still "mine", "mine" and "yours", so when translating English, we should pay attention to the use of adjective possessive pronouns "mine" and "yours". For example:

Is your mother at home? Is your mother at home?

Adjective possessive pronouns: singular forms: my (mine), your (yours), his /her/its (his, her, its).

Plural forms: our (ours), your (yours), their (theirs).

Extended data

use

Possessive pronouns have both the function of expressing ownership and the function of reference, such as:

John cut his finger; It is obvious that there is a broken glass on his desk.

John cut his finger. Obviously, there is a broken glass on his desk.

There are two kinds of possessive pronouns: adjectives (my, your, etc. ) and nouns (mine, yours, etc. ). Adjective possessive pronouns belong to determiners.

Nominal possessive pronouns are equivalent to omitting the possessive structure of-'of the central noun in usage, for example:

Jack's hat means that this hat belongs to Jack.

His hat means that this hat is his.

The syntactic function of nominal possessive pronouns

First, as the subject, for example:

May I use your pen? Your effect is better.

May I use your pen? Yours works better than mine.

B, as an object, such as:

I love my motherland as much as you love your motherland.

I love my motherland as much as you love your motherland.

C, as a prepositional object, for example:

You should interpret what I said according to my meaning, not your meaning.

You should interpret what I said according to my meaning, not according to your own.

D, as a subject complement, such as:

My life is yours. It's all yours. It's all yours. My life belongs to you, to you, to you.

The possessive pronoun refers to the possessive pronoun of an article.

References:

Baidu Encyclopedia: Possessive Pronouns