Possessive Pronouns Saint Louis MO

In French, however, because an apostrophe is only used to replace a letter that is omitted due to elision's is not used to show possession.

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In English we may use an apostrophe and an - s to show that something belongs to someone. In French, however, because an apostrophe is only used to replace a letter that is omitted due to elision, 's is not used to show possession. French uses a different word order than the one we are accustomed to, and possessive adjectives and pronouns also follow a different set of rules.

  • The preposition de (of) is used to express relationship and possession. If the sentence requires de and has two or more nouns, de (or d' before a vowel) is repeated before each noun. De contracts with the definite article le to become du or with les to become des in order to express “of the”:

    • C'est la voiture du père de Jean. (It's John's father's car.)

    • C'est la maison de Lucien et de Sylvie. (It's Lucien and Sylvie's house.)

    • Ce sont les enfants des Renaud. (They are the Renauds' children.)

  • Although de can be used to demonstrate possession of a person or a thing, the idiom être à (to belong to) is usually used to show possession of a thing (not a person). Conjugate être to agree with the subject, and if the sentence contains two or more nouns, repeat the preposition à before each noun:

    • À qui est ce livre? Ce livre est à Roger. (Whose book is this? This is Roger's book.)

    • À qui sont ces CDs? Ces CDs sont à Anne et à Luc. (Whose CDs are these? These CDs are Anne's and Luke's.)

  • Like all French adjectives, possessive adjectives agree in gender and number with the nouns they modify (the person or item that is possessed) and not with the subject (the person possessing them).

    • Claude est mon frère et Anne est mon amie. (Claude is my brother, and Anne is my friend.)

    • Il travaille avec sa mère et son père. (He works with his mother and father.)

    • Elle aide sa tante et son oncle. (She helps her aunt and uncle.)

    • Les Leduc aiment leurs enfants et leur chien. (The Leducs love their children and their dog.)

  • Possessive pronouns are used to replace a possessive adjective + a noun. The pronoun must agree in number and gender with the noun it replaces. Definite articles contract with the prepositions à and de when used before a possessive pronoun. Use Tables 1 and 2 to select the appropriate possessive pronoun.

    TABLE 1 Possessive Adjectives

    Used before all masculine singular nouns and any feminine singular nouns beginning with a vowel

    Used only before singular feminine nouns beginning with a consonant

    Used before all plural nouns

    English

    mon

    ma

    mes

    my

    ton

    ta

    tes

    your

    son

    sa

    ses

    his, her, its

    notre

    notre

    nos

    our

    votre

    votre

    vos

    your

    leur

    leur

    leurs

    their


    TABLE 2 Possessive Pronouns

    Masc. Sing.

    Fem. Sing.

    Masc. Pl.

    Fem. Pl.

    English

    le mien

    la mienne

    les miens

    les miennes

    mine

    le tien

    la tienne

    les tiens

    les tiennes

    yours (familiar)

    le sien

    la sienne

    les siens

    les siennes

    his, hers, its

    le nôtre

    la nôtre

    les nôtres

    les nôtres

    ours

    le vôtre

    la vôtre

    les vôtres

    les vôtres

    yours

    le leur

    la leur

    les leurs

    les leurs

    theirs

    • Mes cheveux sont plus longs que les tiens. (My hair is longer than yours.)

    • Ses idées et les miennes sont vraiment différentes. (His [or her] ideas and mine are really different.)

    • Voilà ma voiture. Où est la vÛtre? (There's my car. Where's yours?)

    • Tu ressembles à tes parents et je ressemble aux miens. (You resemble your parents, and I resemble mine.)

Cliffs Notes Online

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KGHarris & Associates, LLC

314-854-9124
231 South Bemiston
Clayton, MO
www.keysguidetojobs.net