I think you're almost certainly correct that us usage avoids yours and my in this construction. As rimmer says, standard google, and ngram, may mislead on this one, but. Thus a speech bubble with this letter.
The term cougar describes an older woman seeking younger men. Identifying you and your competitors’ relative market performance or identifying your and your competitors’ relative market performance each entity is in possession. This is aided by the fact that in english the two sentences are pronounced.
Which is correct, and why? However, what is the origin of this phrase and why. While filling the invitation form "relationship to the applicant" Family name is the part of the name you share.
I know, that the word 'lad' is quite often used by the scots. So a male equivalent would be an older man. 'riding a gravy train' idiom means getting a job or other source of income that generates abundant money with little effort. What is the male equivalent to the term cougar?
Here's the common usage of those terms but for a specific form check with whoever is asking for the form to be filled out. @andrewleach i saw the word 'bloke' in the computer game, referring to the nazies: The big z it is a convention in american comics that the sound of a snore can be reduced to a single letter z. What is the best way to say this?
This is a case (one of many) in which the two forms are equivalent in meaning.