Possessive determiners
The person who is possessing | In English | For singular masculine nouns | For singular feminine nouns | For plural nouns |
---|---|---|---|---|
je | my | mon | ma | mes |
tu | your | ton | ta | tes |
il / elle | his / her | son | sa | ses |
vous | your (sing, polite form) | votre | votre | vos |
nous | our | notre | notre | nos |
vous | your | votre | votre | vos |
ils / elles | their | leur | leur | leurs |
Itâs important to note that in French, as with the definite and indefinite articles, the possessive determiner agrees with the noun that it precedes in number and gender:
My book.
Mon livre (m.).
My books.
Mes livres (plural).
Her cake is good!
Son gâteau (m.) est bon!
His cake is good!
Son gâteau (m.) est bon!
Mon is used both for singular masculine nouns and for singular female nouns beginning with a vowel or a silent âhâ:
mon hĂ´tel (m.) / mon* amie (f.)/ ma couverture (f.)Â / mes oeufs (m.) / mes clĂŠs (f.)
my hotel / my (female ) friend / my blanket / my eggs / my keys
Ton is used both for singular masculine nouns and for singular female nouns beginning with a vowel or a silent âhâ:
ton hĂ´tel (m.) / ton* amie (f.)/ ta couverture (f.)Â / tes oeufs (m.) / tes clĂŠs (f.)
your hotel / your (female ) friend / your blanket / your eggs / your keys
Son is used both for singular masculine nouns and for singular female nouns beginning with a vowel or a silent âhâ:
son hĂ´tel (m.) / son* amie (f.)/ sa couverture (f.) / ses oeufs (m.) / ses clĂŠs (f.)
his (her, their) hotel / his (her, their) (female) friend / his (her, their) blanket / his (her, their) eggs / his (her, their) keys
De to express possession
Use the preposition de to express possession in French. De is the equivalent of both â âs â and âofâ in English. Notice the word order: âthe thing that is possessedâ + de + âthe possessorâ:
Hereâs Maximeâs reservation.
Voici la rĂŠservation de Maxime.
Note that when de is followed by the definite masculine article le, these merge together to form a variation of de, du; when the definite plural article les follows de, these merge to form another variation of de, des. Remember:
- de + le = du
- de + les = des
Weâre in front of the door of the restaurant.
Nous sommes devant la port du restaurant.