What is the difference between his and her




















This shows that each object belongs to someone. In the second sentence, you can see that both his and him are used. Lucy is the subject.

Him is the object pronoun. His is the possessive adjective. In the last sentence, the word his is used as the possessive pronoun of the subject pronoun he. When a word is used as a pronoun, you no longer have to make sure it comes before a noun. So, accordingly, here, the word his stands alone as it is the possessive pronoun.

It is interesting to note that both his and him are used only in the case of masculine nouns or pronouns. MLA 8 M, Emelda. Please fill up this with possessive noun and explain how it is.

Who can help me. Name required. Email required. Please note: comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment. His is a possessive pronoun and a possessive adjective used in a sentence with reference of something that associates to the masculine noun. It is a third person pronoun. And if it is a possessive pronoun then it appears wherever it is suitable in a sentence. Its alternative terms are hys, ys, hise, is, hies, es, hes and as.

In Medical, it is a Japanese Travel Agency. They appear at different places in the sentences with individual uniqueness. Ask a Question. Which of the following sentences are correct? Smith talking about their husband. Smith talking about her husband. Would be great to have someone with at least a degree in English answer as I am debating this with an Oxford graduate.

Thank You Simon. First, neither is a sentence. Smith IS talking about Although many people insist that you can only use "their" for plural, its use for the third-person singular is well-establisehd.



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