Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. learnenglish.britishcouncil.org › grammar › a1-a2-grammarPossessive 's | LearnEnglish

    We can use possessive 's to talk about the relationship between people or to say who owns something. Possessive 's always comes after a noun or a name. We often use possessive 's or s' when we talk about family and friends. Grandma and Grandpa are my mum's parents. Maria's best friend is Juanita.

  2. Possessive Pronouns vs. the Genitive Case (Pronombres posesivos y el genitivo) El genitivo “-s” no se ha de confundir con los pronombres posesivos. Así podemos decir: Her dress…. (Su vestido… [de ella]) O podemos decir: Andrea’s dress…. (El vestido de Andrea…) En ambos casos expresamos un poseedor y un poseído, en este caso el ...

  3. The possessive 's always comes after a noun. Sam's bicycle. the shop's customers. New York's museums. Emma's brother. When something belongs to more than one person and we give a list of names, we put 's on the last name. Sam and Emma's house Sam's and Emma's house. With regular plural nouns we use ' not 's.

  4. Possession ( John’s car, a friend of mine ) - gramática inglés y uso de palabras en "English Grammar Today" - Cambridge University Press

  5. learnenglish.britishcouncil.org › grammar › english-grammar-referencePossessives | LearnEnglish

    Possessives are forms that we use to talk about possessions and relationships between things and people. They take different forms depending on how they are used.

  6. We usually use possessive ’s when we are talking about living things, such as people, groups of people, and animals. The possessive form can sound strange if you use it to talk about things that aren’t alive (inanimate objects). The dog’s leg is broken. A dog is a living creature, so we can use the possessive. The leg of the table is broken.

  7. 11 de abr. de 2024 · After tragically losing his wife, Pete (Clive Standen) and his son Tyler (Mason Wells) move cross country and purchase the Plaza Square Storage facility and ...