There are lots of different ways of talking about possessions or things that belong to you. For example, Alice said 'Tim this one's for you' and Tim said 'Helen here's yours'.
 | We can show that something belongs or is owned by some by using an apostrophe (') plus the letter s:
A child's plastic pony.
It's Bill's house.
It's the boy's dog. = one boy and one dog
They're the boys' dogs. = more than one boy and more than one dog
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 | We can use these pronouns to show possession:
Is that Bill's coat? No, it's mine. = It's my coat.
Is this pen mine or yours? = my pen or your pen Neither, it's hers. = her pen
Whose? It's Molly's pen.
We can also use these pronouns in this way:
He's a friend of mine. = my friend
She's a colleague of his. = his colleague
That was a great book of yours you lent me. = your book
Note: We don't use apostrophes with these pronouns:
It's her's  | It's hers  | They're your's  | They're yours  | It's their's  | It's theirs  |
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 We can use my / your / his / her before own to show that something belongs only to me/you/ her etc and not shared with anyone else:
This is all my own work. No-one helped me with it.
After sharing a flat for years, she was glad to buy her own house.
We shared our first car with my parents-in-law but we've got our own car now.
We can also use this structure to talk about things we do by ourselves rather than having someone else do them for you.
He can't afford to go to the hairdressers so he just cuts his own hair.
She's got a sewing machine and makes her own clothes.
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 separate different
material cloth, for example, cotton, nylon or denim,
an apron something you wear to protect your clothes while you are cooking
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