It depends on who you are talking to. Informally, to a friend, family member, or child, it would be "tuyo, tuya(singular), tuyos, tuyas (plural) ". Formally, it would be "suyo, suya (singular), tuyos, tuyas (plural)". Another form is less common, "vuestro, vuestra (singular), vuestros, vuestras (plural)".
Remember, these are not modifiers of people, but of objects. Example: "This house is yours" would be "Esta casa es tuya/suya/vuestra". For "These houses are yours" it would be "Estas casas son tuyas/suyas/vuestras". For the masculine form, "This book is yours" is "Este libro es tuyo/suyo/vuestro". "These books are yours" would be "Estos libros son tuyos/suyos/vuestros".
In all these examples, the word described as "yours" is a noun - "house" or "book", in these cases.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun.Examples:Which son is yours? Yours = Possessive pronounYour son is tall. Your = possessive pronoun
"Su" means "his," "her," or "your" in Spanish, depending on the context in which it is used. It is a possessive adjective that indicates ownership or possession of something.
Two possessive forms of the word you are your and yours.
The singular possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, and its. The singular possessive adjectives are my, your, his, her, and its.
"Always yours" is one literal English equivalent of the Spanish phrase siempre tuya. The pronunciation of the phrase -- which involves the feminine informal singular possessive -- will be "SYEM-prey TOO-ya" in Spanish.
No. Yours is the possessive form. "Your" used in a sentence can refer to a single person as in "this is your car" or when you are talking to a group of people and say "This is your country".
The possessive pronoun for "your hair" would be "yours." In this case, "yours" is used to show ownership or possession of the hair in question. It is important to note that possessive pronouns like "yours" do not require an apostrophe to show possession, unlike possessive nouns.
The possessive adjective form is your. The possessive pronoun is yours.
Dónde está el tuyo?
Your and my are both possessive pronouns.
I'm yours in spanish would be "soy tuyo" (masculine) or/and "soy tuya" (femenine)....
Its and yours are the possessive pronouns for it and you. Note that possessive pronouns do not use apostrophes.