Bonjour je m'appelle Megan et aujourd'hui c'est mon anniversaire
Answer:
Ton
leur
Mes
Ses
Explanation:
Possessive adjectives describe the following noun, whether or not that is the subject of the sentence. That is really important to remember. Here are the meanings of the possessive adjectives:
MY
- mon (if followed by a masculine noun)
- ma (if followed by a feminine noun)
- mes (if followed by a plural noun)
YOUR (informal)
- ton (if followed by a masculine noun)
- ta (if followed by a feminine noun)
- tes (if followed by a plural noun)
HIS/HER
- son (if followed by a masculine noun)
- sa (if followed by a feminine noun)
- ses (is followed by a plural noun)
OUR
- notre (if followed by a singular noun - doesn't matter if masculine or feminine)
- nos (if followed by a plural noun)
YOUR (formal)
- votre (if followed by a singular noun - doesn't matter if masculine or feminine)
- vos (if followed by a plural noun)
THEIR
- leur (if followed by a singular noun - doesn't matter if masculine or feminine)
- leurs (if followed by a plural noun)
Here are some tips for figuring out which possessive adjective to use:
- If a word ends in -s or -x, it is most likely plural
- If a word has an extra e at the end, it is most likely feminine
- If a word ends in -que, -ée, -elle, or -tion, it is most likely feminine
- If you have figured out that the noun is singular, but can't figure out if it is masculine or feminine, I would divert to masculine, since there are a lot more masculine words out there than feminine (but only do this as a last resort)
Hope this helps :)
Salut !
<em>La soupe : </em>
- l'aubergine, la tomate, le poivron et le navet.
<em>Les fruits : </em>
<em>- </em>les pommes, les poires, de la banane et des cerises.
Number1.farmaceutico In top of the e put like a coma
It's pour :) wordreference is a really great online dictionary that we use in my French class