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I think the original post was referring to possessives in general, not just 'him'.
Trad grams called my, your, his/her/its, our, your, their possessive adjectives . However, in many modern grammars they came to be called
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You can use adjectives with linking verbs, if that's what you actually want to know, Burstein. - They are intelligent. - He feels good. - Something smells bad. - That looks interesting.
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Hi,
They seem to mean the same thing. In other words, they just seem to be variations in spelling.
Look here.
http://www.medilexicon.com/medicaldictionary.php
They both seem to be adjectives.
Clive
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Hi,
Do you mean an adverb?
An adjective is a word that describes/modifies a noun, pronoun, etc.
Clive
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can you use an adjective to modify an intransitive verb
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As far as I understand, a possessive adjective is placed before a noun : This is his car . A possessive pronoun cannot have a noun after it: This car is his . However, in many European countries terminology is different and the term possessive
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Good. Now: what can I tell you?-- It has no real grammar, since it is just a noun phrase with its appositive. All I can say is that the adjective order is acceptable.
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It can't get any worse than this. Or It can't get any worst than this. Both are adjectives so which one is correct?
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he was feeling aglow Note that if you use two words, the grammar changes, if not the meaning: "He was feeling a glow." "Glow" is a noun, and serves as direct object. "Aglow" is an adjective, and serves as adjective
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There's no problem with the way you have it. "user systems" - no possession. "user" is simple adjective. "user's system" - one system belongs to one user "user's systems" - one user owns (has)
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