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yellow: gelb Recall the following from Gespräch 3-1: Which translates: The sentence demonstrates two of the possessive adjectives. These are (singular) 'my', 'your', and 'his/her/its' in
English and mein, dein, and sein/ihr/sein in German. Note that because these are adjectives, the word ending
must reflect the case and gender of the noun being modified (see Grammatik 4-1 above). In German, the genitive case correspond to the English possessive case or to the objective case proceeded by of
to denote possession. If the possessive is not followed by a noun, it becomes a possessive pronoun. In general, possessive
pronouns are rather rarely used in German (see Pronoun
Tables). The pattern in the case endings of the possessive adjectives is that seen in Lektion 4 for the word ein. We can
generalize these endings as in the following table, where we can express plural endings because other so-called ein-words
do have plurals: The small group of words that take these endings (in addition to ein) includes the possessive adjectives and
kein ("not any" or "no" in the sense of none). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||