Possessive adjectives-French
https://www.tolearnfrench.com/cgi2/myexam/voir2.php?id=4164How Possessive Adjectives accord with their nouns. The Possessive Adjectives can be divided into 3 groups - one for each group of grammatical person (1) My/Our: mon, ma, mes nos, notre (2) Your: ton, ta, tes, vos, votre (3) He/She/It/Their: son, sa, ses, leur, leurs. The gender and number of the object possessed determine which form to use.
Possessive pronouns and adjectives exercise
https://www.englishgrammar.org/possessive-pronouns-adjectives-exercise10.05.2011 · 9. A friend of mine has invited me to France. 10. Jane broke her leg mountain climbing. Grammar notes. My, your, his, her, its, our and their are possessive adjectives. They are used at the beginning of noun phrases. Examples are: my daughter, your son, their dog etc. Mine, yours, his, hers, ours and theirs are possessive pronouns.
Possessive Adjectives - French - Exercises
exercises.one › french › learn-possessive-adjectivePossessive Adjectives – French. In French, possessive adjectives (my, your, his, her, our, their) agree with the noun they describe, NOT with the person it belongs to. It means that if you are talking about ‘his table’, in English, the emphasis is put on the fact that the possessor is masculine. In French, the possessor does not matter; because ‘une table’ is feminine, you have to use the feminine possessive adjective ‘sa’.