# 09. Possessive Adjectives > Source: [A Complete Guide To Every Fundamental In Spanish](https://youtube.com/watch?v=YHDZSHCt1DE&t=2152s) Possessive adjectives indicate that something belongs to someone. In Spanish they always come before the noun, agree in number with that noun, and (only for `nuestro` and `vuestro`) also agree in gender. ## Key Rules - Possessive adjective comes **before** the noun: `mi casa`, `tu perro`, `su amigo`. - All possessives pluralize by adding **-s**: `mi → mis`, `tu → tus`, `su → sus`. - Only **nuestro/a/os/as** and **vuestro/a/os/as** change for gender. - **mi** (no accent) = my (adjective). **mí** (with accent) = me (object pronoun). - **tu** (no accent) = your (adjective). **tú** (with accent) = you (subject pronoun). - **su** can mean *his, her, its,* or *their* — context (or naming the subject) clarifies. ## Pattern Table | English | Singular | Plural | |---------|----------|--------| | my | mi | mis | | your (informal sing.) | tu | tus | | his / her / its / their / your (formal) | su | sus | | our | nuestro / nuestra | nuestros / nuestras | | y'all's (Spain, informal pl.) | vuestro / vuestra | vuestros / vuestras | ## Examples | Spanish | English | |---------|---------| | Mi coche. | My car. | | Mis coches. | My cars. | | Tu perro. | Your dog. | | Tus perros. | Your dogs. | | Nuestro gato. | Our cat. | | Nuestra rosa. | Our rose. | | Vuestro gato. | Y'all's cat. | | Vuestra rosa. | Y'all's rose. | | Yo hablo con su amigo. | I talk with his/her/their friend. | | Yo hablo con John y con su padre. | I talk with John and with his father. | | Yo hablo con Emma y con su madre. | I talk with Emma and with her mother. | | Yo hablo con mis padres y con sus amigos. | I talk with my parents and with their friends. | ## Notes & Gotchas - **su** is ambiguous — to disambiguate, name the owner explicitly (`con John y su padre`). - Don't confuse `mi`/`mí` and `tu`/`tú` — the accent flips them between adjective and pronoun. - Spanish possessives agree with **what is owned**, not with the owner (unlike "his/her" in English). - `vuestro` is mainly used in Spain; Latin America uses `su(s)` for plural "your" too.