The "possessive poison" rule no longer seems to be something the GMAT enforces. I'm glad, as it can be a rather silly rule when enforced mindlessly.
The idea is that sentence 1 in the original post by vivekgautam1 and sentences 1 and 3 in the new post by psumit06 would be wrong because they use a non-possessive pronoun ("she" as a subject or "her" as an object) to refer to a possessive pronoun. Some see this as a violation, but as the various sentences in psumit06's
...
The idea is that sentence 1 in the original post by vivekgautam1 and sentences 1 and 3 in the new post by psumit06 would be wrong because they use a non-possessive pronoun ("she" as a subject or "her" as an object) to refer to a possessive pronoun. Some see this as a violation, but as the various sentences in psumit06's
...








