Possessive It is a word that has its origin in the Latin language: possessīvus. It's about a adjective which is associated with the possession . This term, meanwhile, refers to owning or having something, or to the effect of seizing it.

The most common use of the concept is linked to the people that have domain will over others, that is, trying to control them or keep all their weather . For example: "Ignacio is a good man, but he is too possessive", "I would not tolerate being with someone so possessive, to ask me every five minutes I am doing", “Uncle Ramiro asked Aunt Elba not to be so possessive of me”.
In a human being , the qualifier of possessive is usually seen as something negative. The possessive person invades the other, cutting their freedom and pressing it in various ways. Suppose a woman prepares to go out with her friends and her husband tells her to return in an hour. In addition, the man calls her several times while his wife is reunited. It could be said, therefore, that said man is possessive.
The will to possess another person, reifying them, is a way of violence . In its most subtle manifestations it can be harmless but, as the trend increases, it is dangerous.
Within the scope of the grammar , a adjective possessive is he who points out the ownership of something (referenced by a noun) to a thing or to an individual. "My own" and "our" They are examples of possessive adjectives: "He was Esteban, my dear brother", "What do you do? That place is ours ”.