Information om | Engelska ordet POSSESSIVE


POSSESSIVE

Antal bokstäver

10

Är palindrom

Nej

24
ES
ESS
IV
IVE
OS
OSS

7

4

16

406
EE
EEO
EEP
EES
EEV
EI
EIE


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Exempel på hur man kan använda POSSESSIVE i en mening

  • Sub-types include personal and possessive pronouns, reflexive and reciprocal pronouns, demonstrative pronouns, relative and interrogative pronouns, and indefinite pronouns.
  • Articles are part of a broader category called determiners, which also include demonstratives, possessive determiners, and quantifiers.
  • In Latin, the genitive or possessive case of Jupiter was Iovis/Jovis and thus in most Romance languages it became the word for Thursday: Italian giovedì, Spanish jueves, French jeudi, Sardinian jòvia, Catalan dijous, Galician xoves and Romanian joi.
  • The marking of possessive case of nouns (as in "the eagle's feathers", "in one month's time", "the twins' coats").
  • In Inuit religion, Adlivun (those who live beneath us, from at ~ al below, -lirn in a certain direction, -vun possessive first person plural; also known as Idliragijenget) are the spirits of the departed who reside in the underworld, and by extension the underworld itself, located beneath the land and the sea.
  • The name is likely to derive from the possessive form of a person's name, possibly Hocg, and the Old English word tun, meaning a fortified enclosure, village, or manor.
  • According to county administrator Jack Searles, the name was likely either Weston's Mills or Westons Mills at first (the 1869 Beers Atlas uses the name "Westonville" for the location), then changed to Weston Mills at the behest of President Benjamin Harrison, who sought to standardize post-office names by removing unnecessary possessive forms (see United States Board on Geographic Names).
  • The second-person (singular and plural) possessive adjective your is used as a form of address (that is, when speaking directly to the person(s) entitled to the style(s)); the third-person possessive adjectives his/her (singular) and their (plural) are used as forms of reference (that is, when speaking about the person(s) entitled to the style(s)).
  • The name was later abbreviated to "Tim Horton's" and then changed to "Tim Hortons" without the possessive apostrophe.
  • Thou is the nominative form; the oblique/objective form is thee (functioning as both accusative and dative); the possessive is thy (adjective) or thine (as an adjective before a vowel or as a possessive pronoun); and the reflexive is thyself.
  • Conjecturing that the -a- was altered from an -o- during some prehistoric residence in Illyria he derives the names from an o-grade extension *swo-bho- of an extended e-grade *swe-bho- of the possessive adjective, *s(e)we-, of the reflexive pronoun, *se-, "oneself" (the source of English self).
  • The suffix "-ña" can be translated as either the possessive pronouns his, hers or its in English (cognate to -nya in Malay, and niya in Tagalog), or a signification of greater comparative degree, similar to some uses of the English suffix "-er".
  • Conjecturing that the -a- was altered from an -o- during some prehistoric residence in Illyria, he derives the names from an o-grade extension *swo-bho- of an extended e-grade *swe-bho- of the possessive adjective, *s(e)we-, of the reflexive pronoun, *se-, "oneself" (the source of English self).
  • Variants of the names are often due to the way in which the possessive is spoken in the different languages spoken in Scotland though the centuries: in Gaelic: Dun More or Dun Mor; in French: Dundemore or Dundemor; and in English: Dunsmore or Dunsmor.
  • The removal of the possessive apostrophe in place names is not recorded, but the more recent possessive to adjectival changes are (Darlot's Creek became Darlots Creek and later Darlot Creek).
  • Unmarked, who is the pronoun's subjective form; its inflected forms are the objective whom and the possessive whose.
  • Head-marked possessive noun phrases are common in the Americas, Melanesia, Afro-Asiatic languages (status constructus) and Turkic languages and infrequent elsewhere.
  • The Permian Komi possessive suffixes are added to the end of nouns either before or after a case suffix depending on case.
  • If the second infinitive has a subject, the subject is put in the genitive case; in the inessive case, the second infinitive also accepts a possessive suffix if it is appropriate.
  • Nevertheless, no native speakers would accept the ungrammatical "men department" as a possible way of saying "men's department" nor claim that this "possessive" and obligatory apostrophe in any way implies that men possess the department.


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