Possessive Adjectives
Adjetivos Posesivos
Possessive Adjectives in Spanish
Overview
Possessive adjectives tell you who something belongs to: "my," "your," "his," "her," "our," and "their." In Spanish, these are the short-form possessives that go before the noun, and at the A1 level they are essential for talking about family, belongings, routines, and relationships. You will use them in nearly every conversation.
Spanish possessive adjectives agree with the thing being possessed, not with the possessor. This is a key difference from English. For example, su libro means "his book," "her book," "your book (formal)," or "their book." The form su does not tell you who the owner is; it simply matches the noun (libro) in number. Only nuestro and vuestro also show gender agreement.
How It Works
Short-form possessive adjectives
| Person | Singular noun | Plural noun |
|---|---|---|
| yo | mi | mis |
| tú | tu | tus |
| él / ella / usted | su | sus |
| nosotros/as | nuestro / nuestra | nuestros / nuestras |
| vosotros/as | vuestro / vuestra | vuestros / vuestras |
| ellos / ellas / ustedes | su | sus |
Key points
- Mi, tu, su only change for number (singular/plural), not for gender.
- Nuestro and vuestro change for both gender and number.
- Su/sus is ambiguous. It can mean "his," "her," "its," "your (formal)," or "their." Context usually makes the meaning clear. For emphasis or clarity, you can use de él, de ella, de usted, de ellos:
- su libro → el libro de ella (her book, clarified)
Possessives with family and relationships
| Spanish | English |
|---|---|
| mi madre | my mother |
| tu hermano | your brother |
| su esposa | his/her wife |
| nuestros hijos | our children |
| vuestras amigas | your (all's) friends (feminine) |
| sus padres | their parents |
Examples in Context
| Spanish | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| mi libro | my book | Singular possession |
| tu casa | your house | Informal singular |
| sus amigos | his/her/their friends | Ambiguous without context |
| nuestra familia | our family | Feminine agreement |
| mis llaves | my keys | Plural possession |
| vuestro perro | your (all's) dog | Spain, informal plural |
| su coche es rojo | his/her car is red | Context determines possessor |
| nuestros vecinos son simpáticos | our neighbors are nice | Masculine plural |
| tus ideas son buenas | your ideas are good | Plural |
| ¿Dónde están mis gafas? | Where are my glasses? | Common question |
Common Mistakes
Making mi/tu/su agree with gender
- Wrong: ma casa or mia casa
- Right: mi casa
- Why: Mi, tu, and su do not change for gender. They only change for number: mi → mis, tu → tus, su → sus.
Confusing tu (possessive) with tú (pronoun)
- Wrong: Using tú (with accent) as a possessive
- Right: tu casa (no accent) vs. tú eres (with accent)
- Why: Tu (no accent) = your. Tú (with accent) = you. The accent makes a difference.
Using possessives with body parts in reflexive constructions
- Wrong: Me lavo mis manos.
- Right: Me lavo las manos.
- Why: When using reflexive verbs with body parts, Spanish uses the definite article instead of a possessive adjective. The reflexive pronoun already shows who the body part belongs to.
Not clarifying ambiguous "su"
- Wrong: Assuming everyone will know who su refers to
- Right: Add de él/ella/usted/ellos when the context is unclear
- Why: Su can mean many things. In ambiguous situations, clarify: El libro de ella instead of just su libro.
Practice Tips
- Talk about your family. Practice introducing family members: Mi madre se llama..., mi hermano tiene..., mis abuelos viven en...
- Describe your belongings. Point to things and claim them: mi teléfono, mis zapatos, mi mochila. Then describe a friend's things: tu mochila, tus libros.
- Practice nuestro/nuestra specifically. Since these are the only possessives with gender agreement, give them extra attention: nuestro coche, nuestra casa, nuestros amigos, nuestras vacaciones.
Related Concepts
- Prerequisite: Definite Articles
Prerequisite
Definite ArticlesA1More A1 concepts
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