Yes, mes it's used for this type of situation. My cars In other words, it's used by the first person of the singular regarding more than one thing.
Mes is a plural possessive meaning 'my' in French. Ex: Mes enfants > my children; mes voitures > my cars
"Mes cahiers" is masculine in French because "cahiers" is a masculine noun and the possessive adjective "mes" agrees with the gender of the noun it precedes.
No, "mes" is singular. In French, "mes" is used to indicate possession for singular nouns. For plural possessive, you would use "mes" for plural nouns.
"My buddies" is an English equivalent of the French phrase mes copains.Specifically, the masculine plural possessive adjective mes is "my" in English. The masculine noun copainsmeans "buddies, chums, friends, pals" in English. The pronunciation will be "mey koh-peh" in French.
Mes devoirs is the correct choice between it and the incorrect phrase mes devoir.Specifically, the masculine plural possessive adjective mes means "my." The masculine noun therefore must be in the plural also. This will be devoirs, which translates as "chores, duties, homework, tasks," instead of devoir, which translates as "chore, duty, task."The pronunciation will be "mey duh-vwahr" in French.
"Mes amis" contains a pronoun already: "mes" is a possessive pronoun, meaning "my".
"With my buddies" is an English equivalent of the French phrase avec mes copains.Specifically, the preposition avec is "with" in English. The masculine plural possessive adjective mes means "my" in English. The masculine noun copains translates as "buddies, friends, pals" in English.The pronunciation will be "ah-vehk mey koh-peh" in French.
Je plus mes is French for "I further my"
"My good words" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "mes bons mots."Specifically, the feminine/masculine plural possessive adjective "mes" means "my." The masculine plural adjective "bons" means "good." The masculine noun "mots" means "words."The pronunciation is "meh boh moh."
mes papiers, mes dossiers, mes documents
mes peurs / mes frayeurs / mes angoisses
Ma (followed by a feminine noun) means "my" in English. It is a possessive; the masculine is 'mon', the plural for both is 'mes'.