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French grammar · A1-A2

Possessive Adjectives

A clear, example-first explanation built for CLB 6 / B1 — the level you need for TCF / TEF Canada.

Overview

A possessive adjective shows who owns something (my, your, his...). In French, it agrees with the noun owned, not the owner. Son livre = his book OR her book — context tells you which.

Full table of forms

Pick the form by the gender and number of the thing owned.

je → mymon (m) / ma (f) / mes (pl)
tu → yourton (m) / ta (f) / tes (pl)
il/elle → his/herson (m) / sa (f) / ses (pl)
nous → ournotre (m/f) / nos (pl)
vous → yourvotre (m/f) / vos (pl)
ils/elles → theirleur (m/f) / leurs (pl)

Examples in context

The article is replaced by the possessive — never both.

IMPORTANT trick: feminine + vowel

Before a feminine noun starting with a vowel or silent h, use mon / ton / son (not ma/ta/sa). This is purely for sound.

Common confusion

French does NOT distinguish his vs. her. Son père = his father OR her father. Sa mère = his mother OR her mother.

Free practice

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More grammar

Articles: le, la, les, un, une, des · Verb: être (to be) — Present · Verb: avoir (to have) — Present · Regular -er Verbs (Present) · Negation: ne ... pas · Asking Questions

See the full grammar guide →

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