A 'possessive adjective', also called a 'possessive determiner' or 'possessive article', is a
part of speech that modifies a
noun by attributing ownership to someone or something (with some exceptions noted
below). English possessive adjectives are grammatically
determiners rather than
adjectives, because they cannot modify the same noun as another determiner such as an
article or a
demonstrative, but they can co-occur with adjectives. These are also called by some
determinative possessive pronouns, although not
pronouns.
There are seven of them in modern
English: ''my'', ''your'', ''his'', ''her'', ''its'', ''our'', ''their''. The suffix ''-'s'' works similarly, but it is a
clitic attached to the preceding noun phrase. All of them indicate
definiteness like the definite article ''
the''. Since in English they cannot co-occur with an indefinite article, phrases like "a book of mine" or "one of my books" must be used instead of incorrect "
★ a my book."
For a list of English possessive adjectives and their corresponding pronouns, see the
table of English personal pronouns, possessive pronouns and adjectives.
Some languages have neither possessive adjectives nor
possessive pronouns, and express
possession by declining the
personal pronouns in the
genitive or
possessive case, or by using
possessive suffixes. In Finnish, for example, ''minun'' ("I's"), means "my" or "mine".
Like
possessive pronouns, possessive adjectives can prevent repetitions in a sentence by substituting a noun phrase with ''-'s''. For example, they allow us to say "Sally took off her glasses" instead of "Sally took off Sally's glasses".
Semantics
Possessives do not always attribute ownership. Consider the following examples:
★ my child and my mother
Although ownership of a child could be argued for, it's much more difficult to create a similar link for the ownership of a mother. Thus, here, the relation is not ownership but kinship.
★ my dream
This relation is less clear: one does not quite own their dreams. It may be said that dreams are "had" but not for very long.
★ his train (as in the sentence "If Bob doesn't get to the station in 10 minutes he's going to miss ''his train''")
Bob normally does not own the train.
★ my CD (as in "The kids are really enjoying ''my CD''")
This noun phrase could imply ownership. However, if Pavarotti utters the sentence, he is most likely not talking about the CD he owns but the CD which contains music performed by him.
Common misspelling
The possessive adjective ''its'' is one of the most commonly
misspelled words in the English language; many writers are confused by its
homophone ''it's'' (which can be a
contraction of either "it is" or "it has"), due to the fact that ''-'s'' is a possessive suffix on nouns.
It is worth remembering that no possessive adjective (or
possessive pronoun) in English contains an apostrophe, although a number of them, like ''its'', are homophonous with pronoun-auxiliary contractions:
| pronoun - possessive forms | 'whose'? | my | 'your' | his | her | 'its' | our | 'their' |
| 'be' verb (contracted forms) | 'who's'? | I'm | 'you're' | he's | she's | 'it's' | we're | 'they're' |
See also
★
Adjective
★
Genitive case
★
Possessive case
★
Possessive pronoun
★
Possessive suffix