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ours

Ours is the first-person plural possessive pronoun in English. It is used to indicate that something belongs to or is associated with the speaker and at least one other person, when the noun is not stated. As an independent possessive pronoun, it can function as the subject complement in a sentence: for example, "That book is ours" or "The decision was ours." It cannot directly modify a noun; that role is filled by the possessive determiner "our," as in "our house" or "our plan."

In everyday use, "ours" appears in contexts of shared ownership or responsibility. It often follows a form

Pronunciation is typically similar to "hours" or "powers" in many varieties of English, often pronounced as one

Ours is part of a broader set of personal pronouns that include mine, yours, his, hers, its,

of
the
verb
"to
be"
in
predicative
position
and
can
stand
alone
without
a
following
noun.
The
corresponding
determiner
form
is
"our,"
which
precedes
a
noun,
as
in
"our
car"
or
"our
project."
The
related
reflexive
form
is
"ourselves,"
used
when
the
subject
and
the
object
are
the
same
group,
as
in
"We
prepared
the
meal
ourselves."
syllable
with
stress
on
the
first
sound:
/ˈaʊərz/
in
standard
English.
ours,
and
theirs.
It
is
contrasted
with
"ourselves,"
which
is
the
reflexive
form,
and
with
"our,"
the
determiner
used
before
a
noun.
The
usage
of
"ours"
is
common
in
formal
and
informal
speech
alike
and
appears
in
writing
to
emphasize
collective
ownership
or
association.