A2

Possessive Constructions in Tagalog

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Overview

Tagalog has two main ways to express possession: post-nominal possessives using ng-form pronouns after the noun (bahay ko — my house), and pre-nominal possessives using possessive pronouns before the noun with a linker (aking bahay — my house, formal). This A2 topic builds on your knowledge of pronouns and the linker system to express ownership and relationships.

The post-nominal pattern (noun + pronoun) is by far the more common in everyday speech. The pre-nominal pattern (possessive pronoun + linker + noun) sounds more formal or literary but is important for reading and writing. Both forms are grammatically correct and interchangeable in meaning.

For non-pronoun possessors (like names or nouns), Tagalog uses the ng case marker: bahay ng guro (the teacher's house), libro ni Maria (Maria's book). The choice between ng and ni/nina depends on whether the possessor is a common noun or a personal name.

How It Works

Post-nominal possessives (casual, most common):

English Tagalog Pattern
my house bahay ko noun + ng-pronoun
your house bahay mo noun + ng-pronoun
his/her house bahay niya noun + ng-pronoun
our house (excl.) bahay namin noun + ng-pronoun
our house (incl.) bahay natin noun + ng-pronoun
your (pl.) house bahay ninyo noun + ng-pronoun
their house bahay nila noun + ng-pronoun

Pre-nominal possessives (formal):

English Tagalog Pattern
my house aking bahay possessive + linker + noun
your house iyong bahay possessive + linker + noun
his/her house kanyang bahay possessive + linker + noun
our house (excl.) aming bahay possessive + linker + noun
our house (incl.) ating bahay possessive + linker + noun
your (pl.) house inyong bahay possessive + linker + noun
their house kanilang bahay possessive + linker + noun

For named possessors:

Pattern Example English
noun + ni + name libro ni Maria Maria's book
noun + nina + names bahay nina Pedro Pedro and family's house
noun + ng + common noun bahay ng guro the teacher's house

Examples in Context

Tagalog English Note
bahay ko my house Post-nominal (common)
aking bahay my house Pre-nominal (formal)
kapatid niya his/her sibling Post-nominal
aming paaralan our (exclusive) school Pre-nominal
Nasaan ang bag mo? Where is your bag? Question with possessive
Ito ang libro ni Ana. This is Ana's book. Named possessor with ni
Malaki ang bahay nila. Their house is big. Post-nominal in sentence
Ang ating bayan ay maganda. Our country is beautiful. Pre-nominal (formal/inclusive)
Nanay ng kaibigan ko. My friend's mother. Chained possession
Kailan ang kaarawan mo? When is your birthday? Possessive in question

Common Mistakes

Using Ang-Form Pronouns for Possession

  • Wrong: bahay ako or bahay siya
  • Right: bahay ko (my house), bahay niya (his/her house)
  • Why: Possession uses ng-form pronouns (ko, mo, niya), not ang-form (ako, siya).

Forgetting the Linker in Pre-Nominal Form

  • Wrong: aking libro → correct. aking mga libro → also correct.
  • Wrong: aking ng libro
  • Right: aking bahay (the linker -ng is already part of aking)
  • Why: The pre-nominal possessives (aking, iyong, kanyang) already include the linker.

Confusing Ni and Ng for Possessors

  • Wrong: libro ng Maria
  • Right: libro ni Maria
  • Why: Personal names use ni (singular) or nina (plural). Common nouns use ng.

Practice Tips

  1. Possession inventory: List your belongings using both patterns: bag ko / aking bag, telepono ko / aking telepono. This builds familiarity with both forms.

  2. Family possessives: Combine this with kinship terms: nanay ko (my mother), kapatid niya (his/her sibling), lolo namin (our grandfather). Family contexts are natural for possessives.

  3. Whose is it?: Practice asking and answering: Kanino ito? — Sa akin. / Akin iyan. (Whose is this? — Mine. / That's mine.)

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Personal Pronouns in TagalogA1

More A2 concepts

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