Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses and are used with who, whom, whose, which, that. Choice depends on what is being referred to and type of relative clause
Possessives indicate ownership and possession in German. There are two types: possessive articles and pronouns. German possessives change endings based on case, gender and number
"Hers" is the only correct possessive form for "her". No apostrophe is needed in possessive form of "her". "Hers" is used when object comes before pronoun. "Her" and "hers" can both function as possessive in same sentence
Possessives indicate ownership or belonging in Spanish. Possessive adjectives have short and long forms. Possessive pronouns replace nouns
Possessive pronouns replace nouns to show ownership and belonging. German pronouns must agree with gender, number, and case. Possessive adjectives differ from pronouns in context and form
Possessive pronouns indicate ownership relationships in German. There are six grammatical possessive pronouns in German. English equivalents are mine, yours, his/hers/its, ours, yours, theirs