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Your

Your is a possessive determiner (also called a possessive adjective) in English. It is placed before a noun to indicate that the noun belongs to the person or people being spoken to. Examples include your book, your house, and your ideas. It covers both singular and plural second-person contexts and does not change for gender or number. It can modify non-human nouns as well, such as your car or your time.

Historically, your derives from Old English and Middle English forms that expressed possession for the second

In modern usage, your is used in attributive position before a noun—your name, your health, your responsibilities.

Common pitfalls include confusing your with you're, the contraction of you are, and ensuring you use your

person.
The
Old
English
word
eower
(the
genitive
form
of
the
second-person
pronoun)
evolved
over
time
into
the
modern
form
your.
The
development
mirrors
a
general
pattern
in
English
where
the
second-person
pronoun
and
its
possessive
marker
underwent
simplification
and
standardization
during
the
Middle
English
period.
The
related
independent
possessive
pronoun
yours
is
used
after
a
linking
verb
or
at
the
end
of
a
sentence
to
stand
alone,
as
in
Is
this
book
yours?
Reflexive
forms
include
yourself
and
yourselves,
though
they
are
used
when
the
subject
acts
on
itself.
before
a
noun
rather
than
as
a
standalone
pronoun.
Together
with
yours
and
yourself,
your
remains
a
central
part
of
expressing
personal
possession
in
contemporary
English.