yy2bggggs
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
- Messages
- 2,435
This sounds like it's an interpretation of what "my" means that is specifically biased to demonstrate the point you want to demonstrate, but does not convey what normal English speakers mean.Do you use the expression "my brain?" If so, it would seem that you are not the brain but its owner.
The "my" in "my brain" doesn't convey ownership in the sense you're trying to attribute, no more than "book's pages" conveys that the book owns the pages. It simply conveys which brain you're talking about, just as saying "book's pages" conveys which pages.