@[email protected] to Map [email protected]English • edit-29 months agoThe real size of Australiafiles.catbox.moeimagemessage-square36fedilinkarrow-up1186arrow-down110
arrow-up1176arrow-down1imageThe real size of Australiafiles.catbox.moe@[email protected] to Map [email protected]English • edit-29 months agomessage-square36fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•9 months agoSo what is the rule exactly? “Australia’s” and “Rome’s” both have an apostrophe, and that’s what “it” is standing in for here.
minus-square@itsnotitslink1•9 months agohttps://www.scribbr.com/nouns-and-pronouns/possessive-pronouns/
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•9 months agoI don’t know, seems kind of goofy. For a word like “his”, there is no counterpart “hi”, but there is an “it”.
minus-squaremalijaffrilinkfedilink2•edit-29 months agoI’m assuming that “him” is related to the hypothetical counterpart “hi”
So what is the rule exactly? “Australia’s” and “Rome’s” both have an apostrophe, and that’s what “it” is standing in for here.
https://www.scribbr.com/nouns-and-pronouns/possessive-pronouns/
I don’t know, seems kind of goofy. For a word like “his”, there is no counterpart “hi”, but there is an “it”.
I’m assuming that “him” is related to the hypothetical counterpart “hi”