English, asked by Anonymous, 4 months ago

Write a full and long explanation in these Topics.

1· POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVE
2·DEMONSTRATIVE ADJECTIVE
3·INTERROGATIVE ADJECTIVE

NOTE:
Must Be Full And Long!
Must Contains Examples!
Must Avoid Useless Answers!​

Answers

Answered by sultanabegum93582
3

Answer:

Possessive Adjective

The possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, its, our, their, and whose. A possessive adjective sits before a noun (or a pronoun) to show who or what owns it.

In the examples below, the possessive adjectives are shaded.

She likes your hat.

(The possessive adjective "your" sits before the noun "hat" to tell us who owns it.)

I think her dog has eaten my gerbil.

(The possessive adjectives "her" and "my" are sitting before (or modifying as it's called) the nouns "dog" and "gerbil" to tell us who owns them.)

Demonstrative Adjective

The most common demonstrative adjectives are this, that, these and those. The demonstrative adjective in a sentence will come just before a noun or pronoun and tell you which one it is specifically modifying. Example: This day could not get any better! Example: That house across the street is so adorable.

Interogative Adjective

A word that modifies a noun by asking a question is called interrogative adjectives. Examples of Interrogative Adjective in Sentences: Whose book was that? Which pen do you like more? What books are you buying today?

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Answered by syedmohammed7337
2

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