Objetivos
- Indicate possession with possessive adjectives
- Indicate possession with ser + de
Gramática: Los posesivos
Posesión con ser + de
There are two ways to indicate possession in Spanish. One way is to use the verb ser in the following pattern: object(s) + ser de + person who has the object(s)
- El libro es de María. (The book is María’s.)
- El libro de María explica la gramática. (María’s book explains grammar.)
- Las mochilas son de los muchachos. (The bookbags are the boys’.)
- La casa es del Sr. Rodríguez. (The house is Mr. Rodríguez’s.)
Note that the apostrophe+s construction used in English does not exist in Spanish.
Los adjetivos posesivos
A more common way to express possession, especially when it is clear to whom something belongs, is to use possessive adjectives:
singular possessor | plural possessor |
mi (my) | nuestro (our) |
tu (your) | vuestro (your) |
su (his, her, your) | su (their, your) |
Atención a la acentuación: Tú con tilde, se refiere a la persona (Tú, with accent mark, refers to the person “you”); Tu, sin tilde, es el adjetivo posesivo (Tu, without accent mark, is the possessive adjective “your”).
The chart above, however, only shows the basic form. Possessive adjectives in Spanish – like all adjectives! – must agree in number. In the case of nosotros and vosotros, they also must agree in gender with what is owned:
¡Inténtalo! (Try it!)
Candela Citations
- Indicar posesiu00f3n. Authored by: Deborah M. Edson. Provided by: Tidewater Community College. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Libro abierto ArcoIris. Authored by: Frailejon Editores. Provided by: Flickr. Located at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/frailejoneditores/8197001100. License: CC BY: Attribution