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MY

My is a possessive determiner in English used to indicate that something belongs to the speaker or to someone associated with the speaker. It precedes a noun, as in my house, my friend, or my ideas. It cannot stand alone before a noun in standard usage; the corresponding independent possessive pronoun is mine (That book is mine).

In standard syntax, my accompanies a noun directly and is not preceded by other determiners, though the

Etymology and cognates: my derives from Old English mīn (and related forms) and is historically related to

Usage notes: My is used across varied registers, from everyday speech to formal writing, and appears in

Other uses: In international contexts, MY is the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code for Malaysia, and .my

phrase
my
own
is
a
common
exception
used
for
emphasis,
as
in
my
own
views.
The
pronoun
form
mine
can
function
independently,
as
in
That
book
is
mine,
and
it
originates
from
the
same
root
as
my.
the
German
mein
and
Dutch
mijn.
The
distinction
between
a
possessive
determiner
(my)
and
a
possessive
pronoun
(mine)
reflects
a
broader
Germanic
pattern
in
which
adjectival
possessives
and
substantive
possessives
have
different
forms.
many
fixed
phrases
such
as
my
goodness
or
my
friend.
In
certain
contexts,
it
can
convey
warmth
or
familiarity
when
addressing
someone,
but
in
standard
prose
it
simply
marks
ownership.
It
is
not
inflected
for
person
beyond
the
first
person,
and
its
form
remains
constant
regardless
of
gender
or
number
of
the
possessor.
is
the
corresponding
internet
top-level
domain.
The
sequence
also
appears
in
various
abbreviations
and
branding,
separate
from
its
grammatical
role
in
English.