I'm assuming that English isn't your first language. "Your" is the second-person possessive. If I say to someone, "I have your money," I'm telling that person that I have that person's money. The third-person possessive is "her," "his," or "its," depending on the gender of who or what you're talking about.
If I was talking to John, and I wanted to say that I had Sally's money, I would say "I have her money."
So, when you say:
Potema has your own Class;
Potema has your own Combat Style;
Potema has your own Shout;
You're saying that Potema has the class, combat styles, and shouts of the person on the other side of the computer screen. The person that's reading what you wrote.
I assume that what you mean is this:
Potema has her own Class;
Potema has her own Combat Style;
Potema has her own Shouts;
or "Shout" if she really only has one shout.
I apologize if my comment is unwanted, but I thought you might want to know.
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If I was talking to John, and I wanted to say that I had Sally's money, I would say "I have her money."
So, when you say:
- Potema has your own Class;
- Potema has your own Combat Style;
- Potema has your own Shout;
You're saying that Potema has the class, combat styles, and shouts of the person on the other side of the computer screen. The person that's reading what you wrote.I assume that what you mean is this:
- Potema has her own Class;
- Potema has her own Combat Style;
- Potema has her own Shouts;
or "Shout" if she really only has one shout.I apologize if my comment is unwanted, but I thought you might want to know.
Thanks for the correction.