"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.
The word "my" in French is "mon" (masculine), "ma" (feminine), or "mes" (plural).
"of mine" in French is spelled "le mien" for masculine nouns and "la mienne" for feminine nouns.
"Hold my" can be translated to "Tiens mon" in French.
"Mon", "ma", and "mes" all mean "my" in French.Ma = my + feminine noun > ma voiture : my car.Mon = my + masculine noun > mon vélo : my bicycle. It can also be used with a feminine noun which begins with a vowel sound (which would be hard to pronounce when associated with "ma", ex: mon amie.Mes = my (plural masc. or fem.) > mes amis, mes amies : my [male] friends, my [female] friends.
Ma petite amie is a French equivalent of 'my girl'. The feminine possessive 'ma' means 'my'. The feminine adjective 'petite' means 'little'. The feminine noun 'fille'means 'girl, daughter'. All together, they're pronounced 'mah puh-tee-tah-mee'.ma fille
mes lunettes (feminine and plural)
tous mes cahiers d'exercice
"of mine" in French is spelled "le mien" for masculine nouns and "la mienne" for feminine nouns.
This is dependent on whether the thing you are referring to as yours is masculine, feminine or plural. If it is masculine the word "mon" is used. If is is feminine the word "ma" is used. If it is plural the word "mes" is used regardless of whether the object is feminine or masculine.
"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."
"All my friends" is an English equivalent of the French phrase tous mes amis.Specifically, the masculine indefinite adjective tousis "all" in this context. The feminine/masculine possessive adjective mes means "my." The masculine noun amistranslates as "friends (either all male or mixed female and male)."The pronunciation will be "too mey-za-mee" in French.
There are three ways of saying my in french:1.Ma-female2.Mon-male3.Mes-pluralmasculine for my is mon and feminine for my is ma
mon - masculine, ma - feminine, mes - plural (NB this is according to what is possessed and not who possesses the object) eg: my table - ma table (because the word table is feminine in French) my book - mon livre (because the word book (livre) is masculine in French) my tables - mes tables (here the word tables is plural because there are more than one of them)
Ma (followed by a feminine noun) means "my" in English. It is a possessive; the masculine is 'mon', the plural for both is 'mes'.
"Hold my" can be translated to "Tiens mon" in French.
mon, ma, or mes examples: mon téléphone (masculine singular) ma chambre (feminine singular) mes vêtements (plural) mon image (image is feminine, but it starts with a vowel, so you use "mon" to make the liaison)
'Mes amis français' if they're male or a mixed female/male group and 'Mes amies françaises' if they're female may be French equivalents of 'my French friends'.The plural possessive 'mes' means 'my'. The masculine plural 'amis' and the feminine plural 'amies' mean 'friends'. The masculine plural adjective 'français'and the feminine plural adjective 'françaises' mean 'French'.All together, they respectively are pronounced 'meh-zah-mee fraw-seh' and 'meh-zah-mee fraw-sehz'.