Paul 4 answers
What are the possessive pronouns in Spanish?
Hello, how many possessive pronouns are there in Spanish and what are they?
0
0
0
{0} / {1} characters recommended
The response must contain at least one character
Answers
Darya Artemova
3
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
mío, mía, míos, mías — mine.
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas — yours (singular informal)
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas — his, hers, yours (singular formal or plural formal), its, theirs.
nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras — ours
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Well, it depends... Remember that in Spanish there is a difference in gender (female and male) and number (singular and plural). For instance, in English you have the possessive pronoun MINE and it can mean MÍO, MÍOS, MÍA, or MÍAS. Those headphones are MINE. (Aquellos auriculares son MÍOS)..... Look at that photo. Don't touch it, it's MINE. (Mirá esa foto. No lo toques es MÍA.)
The same applies for YOURS, HIS, HERS, ITS, OURS, AND THEIRS.
Even though some can be the same.... In Spanish there is no difference between HIS, HERS, ITS, THEIRS.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
In Spanish as in English we have 3 personal pronouns so we have 3 possessive pronouns each one with its corresponding diversity according to gender and number:
1st person of singular: mío;mía;míos; mías
2nd person of singular: nuestro;nuestra;nuestros;nuestras
3rd person of singular: suyo;suya;suyos;suyas
1st person of plural: nuestro;nuestra;nuestros;nuestras
2nd person of plural: vuestro;vuestra;vuestros;vuestras
3rd person of plural: suyo;suya;suyos;suyas
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
¿Cuántos posesivos hay en español?
Mmm, unos 12
¿Cuáles son?
Singular: mi, tu, su, nuestro vuestro, su.
Plural: mis, tus, sus, nuestros, nuestras, sus.
¿Quieres aprender cómo se usan?
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Mi mío (yo)
Tu tuyo (tu/vos)
Su suyo (de el/ella/ellos)
Nuestro (de nosotros)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Partha Mandayam
Hello! In Spanish, there are five possessive pronouns. They are:
"Mi" - meaning "my" in English
"Tu" - meaning "your" in English (singular informal)
"Su" - meaning "his/her/your" in English (singular formal)
"Nuestro/a" - meaning "our" in English
"Vuestra/o" - meaning "your" in English (plural informal)
These pronouns agree in gender and number with the noun they are referring to, just like adjectives in Spanish. For example:
Mi casa (My house)
Tu libro (Your book)
Su perro (His/her/your dog)
Nuestros amigos (Our friends)
Vuestra casa (Your house - addressing multiple people)
I hope that helps! Let me know if you have any other questions.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hola Elliot, sería de la siguiente manera:
Yo: mío/a
Tu: tuyo/a
Él/ella: suyo/a
Nosotros: nuestro/a
Vosotros: vuestro/a
Ellos/ellas/ustedes: Suyo/a
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
There are singular possessive pronouns and plural possessive pronouns.
Singular and Plural is decided based on the number of the nouns that are possessed and NOT on the number of person who possesses.
SINGULAR are as follows:
Mi - my
Tu - your
Su - his/ her
Nuestro (masculine) / nuestra (feminine) - our
Vuestro (masculine) / vuestra (feminine) - your (belongs to you all)
Su - their
PLURAL are as follows:
Mis - my
Tus - your
Sus - his/ her
Nuestros (masc.) / Nuestras (fem.) - our
Vuestros (masc.) / Vuestras (fem.) - your (belongs to you all)
Sus - their
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Every pronoun has its own possessive:
mi/mis- yo
ti/tis- tu
su/sus- el/ella/usted
(also for ellos/ellas/ustedes- you don't modify a possesive pronoun if the subject is plural, only if the object is. eg: his car -> su auto; their car-> ALSO su auto. Their cars -> sus autos.)
nuestro/nuestra/os/as- nosotros
vuestro/a/os/as- vosotros
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Every personal pronoun has its own possessive:
mi/mis- yo
ti/tis- tu
su/sus- el/ella/usted
(also for ellos/ellas/ustedes- you don't modify a possesive pronoun if the subject is plural, only if the object is. eg: his car -> su auto; their car-> ALSO su auto. Their cars -> sus autos.)
nuestro/nuestra/os/as- nosotros
vuestro/a/os/as- vosotros
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Diana Muñoz
These are possessive pronouns in Spanish:
Mío - mía
Tuyo - tuya
De él o suyo - suya
De ella o suyo - suya
De eso o suyo - suya
Nuestro - nuestra
De ustedes - suyo - suya - vuestro - vuestra
De ellos - suyo - suya
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello,
Hopefully this will help!
mío, mía, míos, mías — mine
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas — yours (singular informal)
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas — his, hers, yours (singular formal or plural formal), its, theirs
nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras — ours
vuestro, vuestra, vuestros, vuestras — yours (plural informal)
Very important: possessive pronouns must match the noun they represent in both number and gender, just as do the long-form possessive adjectives.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
We have the singular and plural. SINGULAR are as follows: Mi - my Tu - your Su - his/ her Nuestro (masculine) / nuestra (feminine) - our Vuestro (masculine) / vuestra (feminine) - your (belongs to you all) Su - their PLURAL are as follows: Mis - my Tus - your Sus - his/ her Nuestros (masc.) / Nuestras (fem.) - our Vuestros (masc.) / Vuestras (fem.) - your (belongs to you all) Sus - their
mío, mía, míos, mías — mine tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas — yours (singular informal) suyo, suya, suyos, suyas — his, hers, yours (singular formal or plural formal), its, theirs nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras — ours vuestro, vuestra, vuestros, vuestras — yours (plural informal) Very important: possessive pronouns must match the noun they represent in both number and gender, just as do the long-form possessive adjectives
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
We have the singular and plural. SINGULAR are as follows: Mi - my Tu - your Su - his/ her Nuestro (masculine) / nuestra (feminine) - our Vuestro (masculine) / vuestra (feminine) - your (belongs to you all) Su - their PLURAL are as follows: Mis - my Tus - your Sus - his/ her Nuestros (masc.) / Nuestras (fem.) - our Vuestros (masc.) / Vuestras (fem.) - your (belongs to you all) Sus - their
mío, mía, míos, mías — mine tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas — yours (singular informal) suyo, suya, suyos, suyas — his, hers, yours (singular formal or plural formal), its, theirs nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras — ours vuestro, vuestra, vuestros, vuestras — yours (plural informal) Very important: possessive pronouns must match the noun they represent in both number and gender, just as do the long-form possessive adjectives
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Mela Lopez
Possessive pronouns, not to be confused with possessive adjectives, as they are not accompanied by the noun:
mío, mía, míos, mías
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas
vuestro, vuestra, vuestros, vuestras
nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras
Ex:
Ese carro es mío.
Las pelotas rojas son tuyas.
La casa más grande es la nuestra.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
mío, mía, míos, mías — mine.
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas — yours (singular informal)
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas — his, hers, yours (singular formal or plural formal), its, theirs.
nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras — ours.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
mine el mío la mía
yours (tú) el tuyo la tuya
his/hers/its/yours (Ud.) el suyo la suya
ours el nuestro la nuestra
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
The possessive pronouns in Spanish are:
- Mi (my)
- Tu (your)
- Su (his/her/its/your-formal)
- Nuestro/a/os/as (our)
- Vuestro/a/os/as (your-plural informal)
- Su (their/your-formal)
These pronouns are used to indicate ownership or possession of something by someone. For example: "mi casa" (my house), "tu perro" (your dog), "su libro" (his/her book), "nuestros amigos" (our friends), "vuestros coches" (your cars), "sus hijos" (their children).
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello, Elliot! Greetings from California,
Possessive pronouns are:
Masc. Fem. Masc. Fem.
singular plural
yo- mío mía míos mías
Tú- tuyo tuya tuyos tuyas
Ud-
Él- suyo suya suyos suyas
Ella-
Nosotros/as nuestro nuestra nuestros nuestras
Uds-
Ellos-suyo suya suyos suyas
Ellas-
The possessive pronouns always go after the verb according to the gender if it is masculine and feminine.
Example: El coche azul es mío. Los coches azules son míos
La casa blanca es tuya. Las casas blancas son tuyas.
Muchas gracias,
Atentamente,
El profe González
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
In Spanish we have 3 possessive pronouns each one with its corresponding diversity according to gender and number: 1st person of singular: mío;mía; and their plurals míos; mías 2nd person of singular: nuestro;nuestra; and their plurals nuestros;nuestras 3rd person of singular: suyo;suya; and their plurals suyos;suyas.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
mi(s): my
tu(s): your (singular)
su(s): his/her/its/your (formal singular)
nuestro/a(s): our
vuestro/a(s): your (plural, in Spain)
su(s): their/your (formal plural)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
The possessive pronouns in Spanish are:
1. mío(s) - mine
2. tuyo(s) - yours (familiar)
3. suyo(s) - his, hers, yours (formal), theirs
4. nuestro(s) - ours
5. vuestro(s) - yours (plural, familiar)
6. suyo(s) - yours (plural, formal), theirs
They agree in gender and number with the noun they refer to. They are used to indicate possession or ownership of people, places, or things.
Example: "Este libro es mío" - "This book is mine"
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
The possessive pronouns in Spanish are:
1. Mío/a (mine)
2. Tuyo/a (yours)
3. Suyo/a (his/hers/yours formal)
4. Nuestro/a (ours)
5. Vuestro/a (yours plural)
6. Suyos/as (theirs/yours formal plural)
These possessive pronouns are used to indicate ownership or possession, and they always agree in gender and number with the noun that they are modifying.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hi Elliot,
Hello! In Spanish, there are five possessive pronouns:
Mío/mía - mine
Tuyo/tuya - yours (singular informal)
Suyo/suya - his/hers/yours (formal or plural)
Nuestro/nuestra - ours
Vuestro/vuestra - yours (plural informal)
These pronouns are used to indicate possession or ownership of a noun. They agree in gender and number with the noun they are modifying, and they typically come after the noun.
For example:
Este libro es mío. (This book is mine.)
Su casa es muy grande. (Their house is very big.)
Nuestros amigos vienen a cenar. (Our friends are coming to dinner.)
Vuestras bicicletas están en el garaje. (Your bikes are in the garage.)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Dear Elliot, in Spanish language there are as many possessive pronouns as it's needed for the grammatical persons that exist, i.e. Yo=>mi, mis; Tu=>tu, tus; El/Ella=>su, sus; Nosotros=>nuestro(a)/nuestros(as); Vosotros=>vuestro(a)/vuestros(as); Ellos=>vuestros(as). Note that in the collective (plural) cases it must agree with the gender and the number.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
In Spanish, the possessive pronouns are:
- Mi (my)
- Tu (your, singular)
- Su (his/her/their/your, formal or plural)
- Nuestro/a/os/as (our)
- Vuestro/a/os/as (your, plural)
These pronouns agree in gender and number with the noun they are referring to, and are used to indicate ownership or possession. For example:
- Este es mi perro. (This is my dog.)
- ¿Dónde están tus llaves? (Where are your keys?)
- Su casa es muy grande. (His/her/their/your formal or plural house is very big.)
- Nuestro vuelo sale a las 6 de la mañana. (Our flight leaves at 6 in the morning.)
- Vuestros libros están encima de la mesa. (Your plural books are on the table.)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Kenneth Welch
A Spanish possessive pronoun (pronombre posesivo
), such as mío or suyo, is used in place of a noun and a possessive adjective.
Each Spanish possessive pronoun has four forms that must agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun in the phrase they replace. These pronouns are the same as the long forms of possessive adjectives, but are almost always used with the definite article.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hola Elliot,
In Spanish possessive pronouns indicate the possessor (me, you, them, etc.) and it must agree in number and gender with the antecedent.
Subject Pronoun Possessive Pronoun
I Yo Mine Mío, mía
You Tú Yours Tuyo, tuya
She Ella Hers de ella
He El His de él
It Esto, esta, este --
We Nosotros, nosotras Ours de nosotros, nosotras
You Ustedes Yours de ustedes
They Ellos, ellas Theirs de ellos, ellas
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
El mío, el tuyo, el suyo, and el nuestro are the Spanish possessive pronouns. They have masculine, feminine, plural, and singular forms.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
the possessive pronouns are: Mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus, nuestro, nuestra, vuestra or vuestro ( this both pronouns are comparable with "su" or "suyas")
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
There are seven possessive pronouns in Spanish. They are:
1. Mío / Mía - mine (masculine / feminine)
2. Tuyo / Tuya - yours (masculine / feminine)
3. Suyo / Suya - his, hers, yours (formal, singular, masculine/feminine)
4. Nuestro / Nuestra - ours (masculine / feminine)
5. Vuestro / Vuestra - yours (plural, masculine / feminine)
6. Suyos / Suyas - theirs, yours (formal, plural, masculine/feminine)
7. Mismos / Mismas - the same (masculine / feminine)
These pronouns are used to imply possession or ownership of something, and they usually match the noun in gender and number. "Mi libro" means "my book," and "Mis libros" means "my books."
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello Elliot,
I'm a French tutor, but I will try to help out. I'm sure,Spanish has four possessive pronouns. But, those possessive pronouns need to agree in gender and number with the noun they replace. For example, when you used they're masculin singular "El mio,el tuyo, el suyo,el nuestro".If you want to used those masculin singular possessive pronouns to Feminin Singular they will become like "La Mia,la tuya,la suya, la nuestra".
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
These are possessive pronouns in Spanish: Mío - mía Tuyo - tuya De él o suyo - suya De ella o suyo - suya De eso o suyo - suya Nuestro - nuestra De ustedes - suyo - suya - vuestro - vuestra De ellos - suyo - suya
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
The Spanish possessive pronouns are as follows:
mío, mía, míos, mías (mine)
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas (yours—informal singular)
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas (his, hers, theirs, yours—formal singular and plural)
nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras (ours)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Los pronombres posesivos en espaol, or possessive pronouns, are used to convey possession in Spanish. The only difference between possessive pronouns and the long form of possessive adjectives is that they are always followed by one of the definite articles: el, los, la, or las.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
They are 20 possessive pronouns.
Singular Plural
Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine
mine el mío la mía los míos las mías
yours (tú) el tuyo la tuya los tuyos las tuyas
his/hers/its/yours (Ud.) el suyo la suya los suyos las suyas
ours el nuestro la nuestra los nuestros las nuestras
yours (vosotros) el vuestro la vuestra los vuestros las vuestras
theirs/yours (Uds.)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Myrna Pedido
The Spanish possessive pronouns are as follows:
mío, mía, míos, mías (mine)
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas (yours—informal singular)
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas (his, hers, theirs, yours—formal singular and plural)
nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras (ours)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Pronombres posesivos:
My mi mis
Your (informal) tu tus
His su sus
Her su sus
Your (formal) su sus
Their su sus
You (formal) su sus
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello! There are five possessive pronouns in Spanish. They are:
Mi - meaning "my" (singular)
Tu - meaning "your" (singular, informal)
Su - meaning "his," "her," "its," or "their" (singular or plural, formal or informal)
Nuestro - meaning "our" (singular or plural)
Vuestro - meaning "your" (plural, informal)
Note that the forms of "su," "nuestro," and "vuestro" change depending on the gender and number of the noun they are modifying. For example, "sus" is used for plural nouns and "suyo" is used for a singular masculine noun.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Los pronombres posesivos son aquellos que reemplazan al sustantivo e indican pertenencia o posesión de algo. Son: mío, mía, míos, mías, tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas, suyo, suya, suyos, suyas, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Here are the possessive pronouns of Spanish with simple examples of their use:
mío, mía, míos, mías — mine
Tu madre y la mía no pueden cantar. (Your mother and mine can't sing.)
No me gustan los coches rojos. El mío es verde. (I don't like red cars. Mine is green.)
Cuido de tus mascotas como si fueran las mías. (I take care of your pets as if there were mine.)
tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas — yours (singular informal)
Este libro no es mío. Es tuyo. (This book isn't mine. It's yours.)
¿Dónde está mi mochila? La tuya está aquí. (Where is my backpack? Yours is here.)
suyo, suya, suyos, suyas — his, hers, yours (singular formal or plural formal), its, theirs
Mis calcetines son rojos. Los suyos son negros. (My socks are red. His/hers/yours/theirs are black.)
Amo a mi esposa. Él no ama a la suya. (I love my wife. He doesn't love his.)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hi Elliot. I am an English tutor, but to answer your question “ there are only five different possessive pronouns in Spanish.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hola!
Hello! There are seven possessive pronouns in Spanish. They are:
Mío/mía/míos/mías (mine)
Tuyo/tuya/tuyos/tuyas (yours)
Suyo/suya/suyos/suyas (yours/his/hers/theirs - formal)
Nuestro/nuestra/nuestros/nuestras (ours)
Vuestro/vuestra/vuestros/vuestras (yours - plural, in Spain)
De él/ella (his/hers)
De ellos/ellas (theirs)
These pronouns agree in gender and number with the noun they are referring to, not with the person who possesses it. For example:
Este libro es mío. (This book is mine - referring to a masculine noun)
Esta casa es suya. (This house is his/hers/theirs - formal)
Nuestras llaves están en el coche. (Our keys are in the car - referring to a plural feminine noun)
Los perros son suyos. (The dogs are theirs)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
In Spanish, there are only five different possessive pronouns, but each pronoun has different forms for masculine and feminine nouns and for singular and plural nouns. Let's now look at these different forms of the Spanish possessive pronouns.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hi Elliot. In total, there are 13 different possessive pronouns. There are basic possessive pronouns that include my, our, your, his, her, its, and their. There are also independent possessive pronouns. In their independent form, they include, mine, ours, yours, his, hers, its, and theirs.
En total, hay 13 pronombres posesivos diferentes. Hay pronombres posesivos básicos que incluyen my, our, your, his, her, its ytheir. También hay pronombres posesivos independientes. En su forma independiente incluyen, mío, nuestro, suyo, de él, de ella, suyo y de ellos.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
There are 20 possesive pronouns in Spanish
Mine
Yours
His
Her
It's
Ours
Theirs
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
In Spanish, there are
-14 atonic possessives: mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras.
-20 tonic possessives: mío, mía, míos, mías, tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas, suyo, suya, suyos, suyas, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
In Spanish, there are
-14 atonic possessives: mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras.
-20 tonic possessives: mío, mía, míos, mías, tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas, suyo, suya, suyos, suyas, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
-14 atonic possessives: mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras.
-20 tonic possessives: mío, mía, míos, mías, tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas, suyo, suya, suyos, suyas, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
A Spanish possessive pronoun (pronombre posesivo), such as mío, is used in place of a noun and a possessive adjective. Each Spanish possessive pronoun has four forms that must agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun in the phrase they replace¹.
Here are the different forms Spanish possessive pronouns can take:
First person singular (yo): Mío, míos, mía , mías,
Second person informal singular (tú): tuyo, tuyos, tuya, tuyas
Second person formal singular (usted): suyo, suyos, suya, suyas
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello Possessive Pronouns Forms. Spanish has just four possessive pronouns. However, they need to agree in gender and number with the noun they replace.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello! In Spanish, there are five possessive pronouns:
Mi (my)
Tu (your)
Su (his/her/their/your - formal)
Nuestro/a/os/as (our)
Vuestro/a/os/as (your - plural - used mainly in Spain)
These pronouns agree in gender and number with the noun they are referring to. For example:
Mi casa (my house)
Tus zapatos (your shoes)
Su libro (his/her/their/your - formal - book)
Nuestra casa (our house)
Vuestros amigos (your - plural - friends - used mainly in Spain)
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
The possessive pronouns in Spanish are:
mi (my)
tu (your - singular informal)
su (his/her/your - singular formal)
nuestro/a (our)
vuestro/a (your - plural informal)
su (their/your - plural formal)
They are used to indicate ownership or possessions.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Spanish personal pronouns have distinct forms according to whether they stand for the subject or object, and third-person pronouns make an additional distinction for direct object or indirect object, and for reflexivity as well. Several pronouns also have special forms used after prepositions.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Mi, mis, tu, tus, su, sus, nuestro /nuestra, nuestros/nuestras, vuestro/ra, vuestros/ras.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hello Elliot,
Here are the possessive pronouns:
Mio, mia, mios, mias - mine
Tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas - yours (singular informal)
Suyo, suya, suyos, suyas -his, hers, yours (singular formal), its, theirs
Nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras - ours
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
mío, mía, míos, mías, tuyo, tuya, tuyos, tuyas, suyo, suya, suyos, suyas, nuestro, nuestra, nuestros, nuestras, vuestro, vuestra, vuestros y vuestras
They indícate possession of something. Like thats mine , “ eso es mio”
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Emma
Hi Elliot,
There are four different forms of each Spanish possessive pronoun, and each one must match the noun they replace in the sentence in terms of gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural). However, they are nearly often used with the definite article. These pronouns are the same as the long forms of possessive adjectives.
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Hema Modi
Hello
Pronombres posesivos
Spanish possessive pronouns are used in place of nouns to indicate to whom or to what those nouns belong.
Por ejemplo…
¿Dónde está el tuyo? Where is yours?
He perdido las mías. I lost mine.
Characteristics of Spanish possessive pronouns
Start with a definite article*
Replace a possessive adjective + nouns
Must agree with the possessed noun in number and gender
Are identical to stressed form possessive adjectives
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
There are 20!
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Oumaima
Hay seis pronombres posesivos en español
1. mío/mía
2. tuyo/tuya
3. suyo/suya
4. nuestro/nuestra
5. vuestro/vuestra
6.suyo/suya
Did it help you?
Rating
The question creator has marked the question as "has been helpful".
Write an answer
0
0
0
Related questions
Laia 2 answers
Enric 11 answers
