The possessive form is the dog's paw.
The possessive adjective for it is its. For example:.The dog caught its tail in the brambles.
It was John's car. (possessive of proper noun)It's his right to vote every four years. (contraction of It is)The cat licked its sore paw. (possessive)
Possessive noun actually is a grammatical classification, so there is no need to ask what the classification is for a possessive noun. A possessive noun is a possessive noun.A possessive noun is a word used to describe another noun.Examples: the dog's collar; the man's hat; California'sgovernor.The possessive noun and the noun it describes is a noun phrase that functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The dog's collar is missing. (subject of the sentence)I found the dog's collar in the yard. (direct object of the verb 'found')
Her as an adjective is called a possessive adjective. The related possessive pronoun is hers, and the word her can also be a pronoun (they saw her) and colloquially a noun (The dog is a her -- also seen as The dog is a she.)
The word dogs is a plural noun. The singular is dog.
Paw
Why does my dog's paw turn under when walking
The possessive forms are:the dog's pawNick's bikethe monkey's anticsthe student's parentsthe crocodile's tailtomorrow's activitythe scientist's ideas
No, her dog is a phrase.However her is a possessive pronoun
The form dog's is the possessive form of the singular noun dog.Example: This is my dog. My dog's name is Spot.
The possessive form is: the dog's footprints
The plural of paw is paws. As in "the dog licked her paws".
the cats paw lets it balance and the dogs paw doesnt
The possessive noun phrase is: his paw's dirty prints
The possessive form for the bark of the dog is the dog's bark.
The possessive form is Raina's dog.
The possessive form is the dog's collar.