# 32. Stressed Possessive Adjectives > Source: [A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In Spanish (The Conclusion)](https://youtube.com/watch?v=YHDZSHCt1DE&t=8722s) Stressed (or "long-form") possessive adjectives indicate to whom something belongs and translate as **mine, yours, his, hers, ours, theirs**. They go **after** the noun (or after *ser*) and agree with the noun in gender and number. ## Key Rules - Forms agree in **gender** (-o/-a) and **number** (+s). - Used after the noun ("un amigo mío") or as a predicate after *ser* ("el libro es mío"). - *Suyo/a(s)* can mean his, hers, yours (formal), or theirs — clarify with *de él / de ella / de usted / de ellos* if ambiguous. - Equivalent in meaning to a regular possessive used before the noun: *tu cuaderno* = *el cuaderno tuyo*. - Pluralize by adding **-s**. ## Conjugation / Pattern Tables ### Stressed possessive adjectives | Owner | Singular (m/f) | Plural (m/f) | |---|---|---| | mine | mío / mía | míos / mías | | yours (tú) | tuyo / tuya | tuyos / tuyas | | his / hers / yours (Ud.) / theirs | suyo / suya | suyos / suyas | | ours | nuestro / nuestra | nuestros / nuestras | | yours (vosotros) | vuestro / vuestra | vuestros / vuestras | ## Examples | Spanish | English | |---|---| | El libro es mío. | The book is mine. | | El libro mío es nuevo. | My book (the book of mine) is new. | | John es un amigo mío. | John is a friend of mine. | | La computadora tuya es rápida. | Your computer (the computer of yours) is fast. | | La clase nuestra empieza ahora. | Our class starts now. | | Las clases nuestras son largas. | Our classes are long. | | El teclado es suyo. | The keyboard is his/hers/theirs. | | El teclado de él. | His keyboard (clarified). | | El teclado suyo. | His/her/their keyboard. | | El cuaderno tuyo. | Your notebook / the notebook of yours. | | Estos zapatos son míos. | These shoes are mine. | ## Notes & Gotchas - Always agree with the **possessed noun**, not the owner: *los amigos nuestros* (our friends — masculine plural). - *Suyo* is ambiguous; in spoken Spanish people often replace it with *de él / de ella / de usted / de ellos* for clarity. - Stressed forms emphasize the possession; the unstressed forms (mi, tu, su, nuestro, vuestro) are more common in everyday speech before the noun.