-
Introduction
View the activity introduction for more information on the topic
-
Read aloud
Read the question aloud
-
Accessibility
Open the accessibility toolbar to change fonts and contrast, choose a different language, use a ruler and more
A possessive pronoun is a pronoun that shows who owns something.
Delilah read her book.
Delilah said you can't take that book. It's hers.
The pronouns her and hers both tell us that the book belongs to Delilah, but how do we know which one to use?
In the second example, we use hers because the pronoun is on its own and we aren't saying book again afterwards.
Look at this list of possessive pronouns:
my book / mine
your book / yours
his book / his
her book / hers
our book / ours
your book / yours
their book / theirs
We use the second word in each row if we aren't mentioning the name of the thing the person owns.
Which possessive pronouns would complete these gaps?
Leave that dog alone. He's ___.
Don't touch him. He's ___ dog.
In the first sentence, we use the possessive pronoun mine as we don't mention the dog again.
Leave that dog alone. He's mine.
In the second sentence, we use the possessive pronoun my as we do mention the dog again.
Don't touch him. He's my dog.
In this activity, you'll be on the hunt for possessive pronouns. Good luck.
Question
/ 10Mrs Morris
Do you want to skip questions and finish?
Hold up, it looks like there may be an issue with your spelling. Why not try it again?
You need to check your answer before you proceed. Are you sure you want to skip?
Teacher explanation