Possessive adjectives in French

Part ofFrenchAdjectives and adverbs

Key points about possessive adjectives in French

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  • show whom something or someone belongs to.

  • French possessive adjectives must agree with the in number and .

  • Mon, ton and son are used instead of ma, ta and sa before a word starting with a vowel or silent ‘h’.

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Video: Possessive adjectives in French

Watch the video to find out how to use possessive adjectives in French.

Possessive adjectives must agree with their noun - either masculine or feminine, singular or plural.

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Possessive adjectives

Possessive adjectives show whom something or someone belongs to.

To express whom something belongs to (eg my, your, our), use a possessive adjective. In French, the possessive adjective agrees with the gender of the thing owned, not the owner.

EnglishMasculineFemininePlural (masculine and feminine)
mymonmames
your (familiar singular)tontates
his/her/itssonsases
ournotrenotrenos
your (formal/plural)votrevotrevos
theirleurleurleurs

For example:

J‘ai parlé avec mon grand-père hier. – I spoke to my grandad yesterday.

C’est ton stylo ? – Is it your pen?

Nous allons visiter leur maison demain. – We’re going to visit their house tomorrow.

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Remember

Mon, ton and son are used instead of ma, ta and sa before a feminine word starting with a vowel or silent 'h'. This makes pronunciation easier.

For example:

Mon amie est très sportive. – My (female) friend is very sporty.

Possessive adjectives - Mini quiz

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Choose the correct possessive adjective to complete this sentence:

Mon/Ma/Mes amis sont très amusants.

Choose the correct possessive adjective to complete this sentence:

Nous avons parlé avec notre/nos grand-mère hier.

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Quiz - Possessive adjectives in French

Practise what you've learned about possessive adjectives with this quiz.

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Now you’ve learned about possessive adjectives, why not explore interrogative adverbs in French?

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