When listing down nouns, French possessive must be used in front of every noun. In English, the possessive adjective only needs to be used once. For example; Mon fils, ma fille et mes petits-enfants. β My son, daughter, and grandchildren. The adjectives βmon,β βma,β and βmes,β have to appear before the nouns.
In English grammar, there are eight possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, theirs (which can be used for singular and plural), ours, yours, and theirs. As opposed to possessive adjectives, which always go before a noun, possessive pronouns are used to replace the noun and have a standalone structure. For example: Possessive adjective
1. Possessives. Possessives are mainly used to indicate that something belongs to or is part of someone. We also use them to express relationships (people or animals) and to talk about parts of the body. They go according to the possessor, not to the possession. Possessive pronoun. I have a pet, so this pet is mine.
So in the sentence, Il aime sa voiture ("He loves his car"), the possessive adjective sa agrees with what it modifies: the feminine, singular la voiture ("the car").If we replace the possessive adjective and noun here with a possessive pronoun, that sentence would read: Il aime la sienne (again, agrees with the feminine, singular la voiture).
Here are the short-form possessive adjectives (sometimes known as possessive determiners ): mi, mis β my β Compra mi piano. (She is buying my piano.) tu, tus β your (singular familiar) β Quiero comprar tu coche. (I want to buy your car.) su, sus β your (singular or plural formal), its, his, her, their β Voy a su oficina. .