Uncle's armchair and aunt's armchair

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Rachel Adams

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Does this sentence sound unnatural without "my"?

"This is uncle's armchair and that is aunt's armchair."
 

GoesStation

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No. You will occasionally see someone refer to those relatives by their titles. It's very rare. When it's done, you have to capitalize the titles because they're proper nouns.
 

Rover_KE

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Without 'my', we don't know whose uncle and aunt the armchairs belong to.
 

emsr2d2

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We'd use either:

1. This is my uncle's armchair and this is my aunt's.
2. This is Uncle Ernie's armchair and this is Aunt Helen's.
 

Yankee

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Does this sentence sound unnatural without "my"?

"This is uncle's armchair and that is aunt's armchair."
I would expect to hear/use "my" unless the conversation was among close relatives, in which case omitting "my" would not be uncommon (AmE).
 

Rachel Adams

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We'd use either:

1. This is my uncle's armchair and this is my aunt's.
2. This is Uncle Ernie's armchair and this is Aunt Helen's.

Would it be wrong to say: "This is my Uncle Ernie's armchair"?
 
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