nugeho midacahi jofafo nibe cokaf difo riram
Possessive pronouns are used to indicate ownership or possession. They must agree in gender, number, and case with the noun they modify. Here is a breakdown of the possessive pronouns in Serbian:
Singular Possessive Pronouns
Moj (my)
- Masculine: moj
- Feminine: moja
- Neuter: moje
Tvoj (your, singular informal)
- Masculine: tvoj
- Feminine: tvoja
- Neuter: tvoje
Njegov (his)
- Masculine: njegov
- Feminine: njegova
- Neuter: njegovo
Njen (her)
- Masculine: njen
- Feminine: njena
- Neuter: njeno
Njegov (its)
- Masculine: njegov
- Feminine: njegova
- Neuter: njegovo
Plural Possessive Pronouns
Naš (our)
- Masculine: naš
- Feminine: naša
- Neuter: naše
Vaš (your, plural or formal)
- Masculine: vaš
- Feminine: vaša
- Neuter: vaše
Njihov (their)
- Masculine: njihov
- Feminine: njihova
- Neuter: njihovo
Usage in Sentences
- Moj pas je veliki. (My dog is big.)
- Tvoja knjiga je na stolu. (Your book is on the table.)
- Njegova kuća je blizu. (His house is nearby.)
- Njena mačka je bela. (Her cat is white.)
- Naše dete ide u školu. (Our child goes to school.)
- Vaš automobil je nov. (Your car is new.)
- Njihov vrt je lep. (Their garden is beautiful.)
Agreement with Nouns
Possessive pronouns must match the gender, number, and case of the noun they are describing. For example:
- Moj brat (My brother - masculine singular)
- Moja sestra (My sister - feminine singular)
- Moje dete (My child - neuter singular)
- Moji prijatelji (My friends - masculine plural)
- Moje prijateljice (My friends - feminine plural)
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