Possessive Pronouns Chapter 6, Lesson 4.

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Possessive Pronouns Chapter 6, Lesson 4

Possessive Pronouns Plural our, ours A possessive pronoun is a personal pronoun used to show ownership or relationship. Singular Plural my, mine our, ours your, yours her, hers, his, its their, theirs

Possessive Pronouns The possessive pronouns my, your, her, his, its, our and their come before nouns. Ex. The dog pricked up its little ears. Ex. It saw the boy and heard his loud cry for help. OWNERSHIP RELATIONSHIP

Possessive Pronouns The possessive pronouns mine, ours, yours, his, hers, its and theirs can stand alone in a sentence. This cat is mine. That cat is his. Is the striped cat yours? No, mine is all black.

Possessive Pronouns and Contractions Some possessive pronouns sound like contractions. A possessive pronoun NEVER has an apostrophe. A contraction ALWAYS has an apostrophe. Possessive Pronouns Contractions Its (Its paws are muddy.) It’s (It’s been a long day.) Your (Your dog is nice.) You’re (You’re nice.) Their (Their dog is smart.) They’re (They’re proud of her.)

Your Turn P. 67, Part A, 1-10 Write the correct pronoun or contraction for each sentence. P. 67, Part B Correct the possessive pronoun errors in each sentence. If there is no error in a sentence, write CORRECT.