both of ours
English
Pronoun
- (colloquial) That which belongs to both of us; the possessive first-person pronoun used without a following noun.
- 1981, Meredith Sue Willis, Higher Ground:
- “[…] Everything we have is both of ours.”
- 2011, Dean Karlan, Jacob Appel, More Than Good Intentions: Improving the Ways the World's Poor Borrow, Save, Farm, Learn, and Stay Healthy:
- The I in this book is me, Dean. But the writing is both of ours.
- 1981, Meredith Sue Willis, Higher Ground:
Translations
See also
English personal pronouns
| personal pronoun | possessive pronoun | possessive determiner | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| subjective | objective | reflexive | |||||
| first person | singular | I me (colloquial) | me | myself | mine | my mine (before vowels, archaic) | |
| plural | we | us | ourselves ourself | ours | our | ||
| second person | singular | standard, formal | you | you | yourself | yours yourn (obsolete outside dialects) | your |
| archaic, informal | thou | thee | thyself theeself | thine | thy thine (before vowels) | ||
| plural | standard | you ye (archaic) | you | yourselves | yours yourn (obsolete outside dialects) | your | |
| colloquial | you all | you all | – | – | your all's (nonstandard) | ||
| informal / dialectal | (see list of dialectal forms at you and inflected forms in those entries) | ||||||
| third person | singular | masculine | he | him | himself hisself (archaic) | his hisn (obsolete outside dialects) | his |
| feminine | she | her | herself | hers hern (obsolete outside dialects) | her | ||
| neuter | it | it | itself | its his (archaic) | its his (archaic) | ||
| genderless, nonstandard | they | them | themself, themselves | theirs | their | ||
| genderless, nonspecific (formal) |
one | one | oneself | – | one's | ||
| plural | they | them | themselves | theirs theirn (obsolete outside dialects) | their | ||
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