Remember: 'son, sa and ses' all mean 'his', 'her' and 'its'. They follow the same pattern and behave in the same way as 'mon, ma, mes' and 'ton, ta, tes'.
In French 'son pull' can therefore mean 'his pullover', 'her pullover' or even 'its pullover'. On its own we can't tell which one it is - we would need to work it out from the context. So if the sentence was 'Hamza porte son pull', we would know that Hamza is a boy, so he must be wearing his pullover. If the sentence was 'Caroline porte son pull', we know that Caroline is a girl, so she must be wearing her pullover. |
So, the word is the same for his, her and its. BUT it changes according to the gender and number of what comes AFTER it: son = masculine noun following sa = feminine noun following SES = plural noun following
With this in mind, you should very quickly spot a pattern in this exercise ... |
Vocabulaire (some need to be made plural above!):
un ami, un bonbon, une cravate, un crayon, une gomme, un lapin, un stylo, une trousse