Long-Form Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ESPAÑOL UNO CAPÍTULO 6 ADJETIVOS POSESIVOS.
Advertisements

Long-Form Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
Page 12 – Para Empezar Realidades 3
1 Possessive Adjectives Spanish 3 (H) ch.3 2 Possessive Adjectives (short forms)(in front) minuestro tu su.
Possessive Adjectives
ANTE TODO Possessive adjectives, like descriptive adjectives, are words that are used to qualify people, places, or things. Possessive adjectives express.
¡Mi casa es su casa!.
Possessive adjectives Grammar essential #31. Possessive Adjectives One can also make possessives with adjectives. This exist in English as well. his,
Long-Form Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
Possessive Adjectives
POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES
Agreement in gender and number
Possessive adjectives used before a noun (a.k.a. short form) Mi, misNuestro/a/os/as Tu, tus Vuestro/a/os/as Su,sus.
3.2 Possessive Adjectives ANTE TODO  Possessive adjectives, like descriptive adjectives, are words that are used to qualify people, places, or things.
Pronombres Posesivos By Michelle Pitchford and Jacqueline Gliozzi.
Possesive Adjectives.
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (short) forms you learned in Lesson 3 and the stressed (long) forms. The stressed possessive.
Apuntes: Short & Long Possessive Adjectives & Possessive Pronouns.
Possessive Adjectives Remember the possessive adjectives from Spanish 1? You learned my, your, his, her, our, their: Possessive Adjectives from Spanish.
3.2 Possessive Adjectives ANTE TODO  Possessive adjectives, like descriptive adjectives, are words that are used to qualify people, places, or things.
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you learned previously and the stressed (or long) forms. The stressed forms.
Copyright © 2012 Vista Higher Learning. All rights reserved  Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you.
4B – Possessive adjectives Long / stressed forms.
To indicate possession (that someone owns something) or a relationship in Spanish, the word “de” is used in the following formula: El amigo de Jorge.
Possessive Adjectives
Possessive Adjectives
Los adjetivos posesivos Los apuntes de clase. Los apuntes: los adjetivos y los pronombres de posesión Besides the SHORT form- mi(s), tu(s), su(s), nuestro.
Present tense of Ser spanish 1 p
Possessive Pronouns Clyne Possessive Pronouns Since you’ve already learned the possessive adjectives, you already (mostly) know the possessive pronouns.
Possessive Adjectives Expressing Possession. Possessive Adjectives  Possessive adjectives are used to indicate that something belongs to someone or to.
Possessive Adjectives (Los adjetivos posesivos). Possessive Adjectives Tell what belongs to someone –Mi libro Show relationship –Nuestra madre.
Possessive Adjectives Possession is 9/10 of the law!
How to Show Possession.
Apuntes el 4 de febrero Los adjetivos posesivos (Possessive Adjectives) To indicate that something belongs to someone or to show a relationship between.
Usando adjetivos posesivos (Using possessive adjectives)
Possessive Adjectives/ Pronouns
Possessive Adjectives
The Fun and Exciting World of Possessive Adjectives
Long-Form Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
La semana de 9/11 Un repaso.
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you learned previously and the stressed (or long) forms. The stressed forms.
Possessive Adjectives
Possessive Adjectives
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you learned in Spanish 1 and the stressed (or long) forms. The stressed.
The Fun and Exciting World of Possessive Adjectives
Stressed Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
Repaso rápido 12/12/17 ¿Qué es la diferencia entre tu y tú?
Apuntes: Showing Possession
Long-Form Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you learned previously and the stressed (or long) forms. The stressed forms.
Los Pronombres pronouns.
Los pronombres personales
Possessive Adjectives
Possessive Adjectives
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you learned in Spanish 1 and the stressed (or long) forms. The stressed.
Possessive Adjectives
Repaso rápido 12/12/17 State whether the following require a possessive adjective or pronoun: My boots are brown. The boots are mine. Their friends are.
Possessive Adjectives
Page 12 – Para Empezar Realidades 3
Gramática de 2A.
The Fun and Exciting World of Possessive Adjectives
Possessive Adjectives
Possessive Adjectives (Long Forms)
Possessive Adjectives
What were the 3 main uses of ser?
Possessive adjectives
Possessive Adjectives
Spanish has two types of possessive adjectives: the unstressed (or short) forms you learned in Descubre, nivel 1 and the stressed (or long) forms. The.
Apuntes: Showing Possession
Presentation transcript:

Long-Form Possessive Adjectives and Pronouns (Los adjetivos y pronombres posesivos de forma larga) ¡Este premio es mío! ¡No, no es tuyo! ¡Es mío!

mi (s) nuestro (a, os, as) tu (s) vuestro (a, os, as) su (s) su (s) In Capítulo 3, you were introduced to the short forms (unstressed) of possessive adjectives. You may remember that . . . mi (s) nuestro (a, os, as) tu (s) vuestro (a, os, as) su (s) su (s) these are four-form adjectives, which agree in number and gender. these are two-form adjectives, which agree only in number, while . . . These forms always precede the noun. Mi signo es virgo y tu signo es piscis. My sign is virgo and your sign is pisces.

In this chapter you will study the long (stressed) forms In this chapter you will study the long (stressed) forms. Notice the following chart. Possessive adjectives (long forms) Subject pronoun Singular Plural yo mío/a míos/as my, (of) mine tú tuyo/a tuyos/as your (fam.), (of) yours él his, (of) his, its ella suyo/a suyos/as hers, (of) hers, its Ud. your (form.) nosotros/as nuestro/a nuestros/as our, (of) ours vosotros/as vuestro/a vuestros/as your (fam. pl.), (of) yours) ellos their, (of) theirs ellas suyo/a suyos/as their, (of) theirs Uds. your (form. pl.), (of) yours)

In contrast to the short forms, the long forms of possessive adjectives always follow the noun. Also, all are four-form adjectives and thus agree with the noun in both gender and number. La revista tuya está en la mesa. Your magazine is on the table. Aquí tienes dos reseñas mías. Here you have two reviews of mine. El titular nuestro es grande. Our headline is big.

El cuaderno mío es el azul. mío es el azul. The long forms of possessive adjectives may be used as pronouns. In such instances, the definite article is used with the possessive adjective and the noun is omitted. Aquí hay dos cuadernos: uno negro y uno azul. ¿Cuál es el cuaderno tuyo, el negro o el azul? tuyo, el Here are two notebooks: a black one and a blue one. Which is your notebook, the black one or the blue one? yours, the black one or El cuaderno mío es el azul. mío es el azul. My notebook is the blue one. Mine is the blue one.

Los locutores nuestros son muy buenos. nuestros son muy buenos. The long forms of possessive adjectives may be used as pronouns. In such instances, the definite article is used with the possessive adjective and the noun is omitted. More examples: Los locutores nuestros son muy buenos. nuestros son muy buenos. Ours are very good. Our announcers are very good. Las noticias tuyas son horribles. tuyas son horribles. Your news is horrible. Yours is horrible.

—La crítica suya es imposible. —His criticism is impossible. As with the short forms of su(s), long-form possessive adjectives and pronouns may be clarified in the third-person forms. For adjectives, the long form suyo/a(s) can be replaced by the construction de + pronoun in order to clarify the identity of the possessor. —La crítica suya es imposible. —His criticism is impossible. —¿La crítica de quién? —Whose criticism? —La crítica de él. (no de ella o de usted) —The criticism of his. (not hers or yours)

—El anfitrión suyo llega ahora. —Their host is arriving now. As with the short forms of su(s), long-form possessive adjectives and pronouns may be clarified in the third-person forms. For adjectives, the long form suyo/a(s) can be replaced by the construction de + pronoun in order to clarify the identity of the possessor. —El anfitrión suyo llega ahora. —Their host is arriving now. —Sí, el de ellas (no de ellos o de ustedes, etc.) siempre llega a las diez. —Yes, the host of theirs (not theirs [masculine] or yours, etc.) always arrives at ten.

La suya (la telenovela) es más interesante que la nuestra. For the pronouns el suyo, la suya, los suyos, and las suyas, use the definite article + de + pronoun: el/la de usted, los/las de ellos, etc. The definite article must agree in gender and number with the noun it replaces. La suya (la telenovela) es más interesante que la nuestra. Yours (the soap opera) is more interesting than ours. Stated more unambiguously: La de usted es más interesante que la nuestra. Yours is more interesting than ours.

My cell phone doesn’t have a digital camera. It should be noted that the stressed forms of the possessive adjectives and pronouns are used for emphasis in a comparative manner, much as we use vocal stress in English for the same purpose. Notice the following: My cell phone doesn’t have a digital camera. The preceding is a simple statement of fact. I’m not comparing my camera to anyone else’s. The word my is not stressed in English in this case, so the unstressed possessive is used in Spanish. Mi celular no tiene cámara digital.

My cell phone doesn’t have a digital camera, but yours does. It should be noted that the stressed forms of the possessive adjectives and pronouns are used for emphasis in a comparative manner, much as we use vocal stress in English for the same purpose. Notice the following: If, on the other hand, I want to compare my cell phone to yours, I might say something like . . . My cell phone doesn’t have a digital camera, but yours does. In this case, the stressed forms of the possessives are used in Spanish, just as we would use vocal stress in English. El celular mío no tiene cámara digital, pero el tuyo sí la tiene.

Omission of the Definite Article The definite article can be omitted after the verb ser, but only when the sentence deals with simple possession. Este coche es el mío, y aquél es el tuyo. mío, y aquél es tuyo.

Omission of the Definite Article However! Mi carro es verde. ¿De qué color es el tuyo? Since more is involved than simple possession, the article is obligatory, even after the verb ser. El mío es azul.

FIN