"votre" and "vos" are both possessives, and both translated by "your". You use "votre" when speaking about a single object:
- C'est votre voiture ? (is that your car).
- Est-ce que votre mère va bien ? (is your mother going well,)
You use "vos" when there are a plurality of objects:
- je connais déjà vos enfants (I already know your children)
- sortez vos cahiers et vos trousses (take out your notebooks and your pencil cases).
"Votre" is used for singular singular/formal "your," while "vos" is used for plural "your." For example, "votre voiture" means "your car" (singular), while "vos voitures" means "your cars" (plural).
Answervotre, vos (formal) Answerton, tes (informal)
I like your shoies is " j'aime tes / vos chaussures" in French
"ton"ton chapeau (masculine noun) = your hat"ta" (fem.) : ta voiture (your car)"tes" (plural, for both masc. or fem.)tes chapeaux, tes voitures"your" (for the formal or plural "you")votre > (for both masc. and fem.) votre chapeau, votre voiture (you all have one hat, one car)vos > (for both masc; and fem., but in plural) vos chapeaux, vos voitures (you have several hats - maybe one for each of you- and several cars)
The pronunciation of the phrase 'vos souhaits' is the following: voh sway. The word-by-word pronunciation is as follows: 'vos' means 'your'*; and 'souhaits' means 'wishes'. But the phrase is the French equivalent of 'Bless you' and '[As you] wish'. *This is the plural form of the second person, as in 'you all'.
Dans vos reves, bâtard. Sucker doesn't mean anything in French, so I substituted it with something you can look up on google translations. However, if you are speaking to a girl, substitute it with garce (Dans vos reves, garce). If you are looking for a word that is not quite as strong, substitute that with bete (Dans vos reves, bete). However, if you mean something close to loser or fool, substitute it with fou (Dans vos reves, fou). All of the s are silent (dans, vos, and reves). Pronounce the sentence Dan voh rev, bahtard, Dan voh rev, garse, Dan voh rev, bet, or Dan voh rev, fooh.
ton, ta, tes - votre, vos
fermez vos livres
qu'est ce que vous faites pendant vos loisirs ? que faites-vous pendant vos loisirs / votre temps libre ? -
The word for "your" in French differs depending on the gender and number of the word that follows it, as well as the formality of your speech. The informal versions of "your" would be ton/ta/tes, which are masculine/feminine/plural, respectively. The formal versions of "your" would be votre/votre/vos, which are also masculine/feminine/plural, respectively. Examples: your brother = ton frère OR votre frère your mother = ta mère OR votre mère your parents = tes parents OR vos parents
"Your" formal: singular = votre plural = vos "Your" informal: masculine singular = ton feminine singular = ta plural = tes
"ton"ton chapeau (masculine noun) = your hat"ta" (fem.) : ta voiture (your car)"tes" (plural, for both masc. or fem.)tes chapeaux, tes voitures"your" (for the formal or plural "you")votre > (for both masc. and fem.) votre chapeau, votre voiture (you all have one hat, one car)vos > (for both masc; and fem., but in plural) vos chapeaux, vos voitures (you have several hats - maybe one for each of you- and several cars)
your can be said "ton + masculine thing / ta + feminine thing or tes +plural or "votre"(in both gender) or vos (plural) "ton" is related to "tu" i.e. "you" for someone you are close to, "votre" is the possessive for "vous", meaning "you" for several persons.
our -- notre, nos your -- ton, ta, tes / votre, vos Your question is a little oddly worded. You might try asking something more clear and specific.
votre Improve by Crisdean What is above is absolutly correct but too restrictive "Your" can be in french For the 2nd singular form (Tu) ton (masculine) - Ton chien - your dog ta (feminine) - ta soeur - your sister tes (plural) - Tes jouets - Your toys For the 2nd singular polite form dans the 2nd plural form (vous) Votre (singular for every gender) - votre chien, votre soeur Vos (plural) - Vos chiens, vos soeurs N B. Just remember that french use the "vouvoiement" which shows respect to your interlocutor and/or to someone you don't know. French use Tu (you in singular) with friends and "Vous" to somebody they don't know. The concept of "vouvoiement" is important in French. It could be considered as unpolite, or even aggressive to use "tu" to someone you don't know Hope this is clear enough but you can use "tu" with me :O))
Donnez moi votre avis s'il vous plaît, conseillez-moi s'il vous plaît. Or better: Vos conseils seront appréciés.
bonjour - comment allez-vous - comment va votre femme / votre mari / comment vont vos enfantsmerciau revoiril fait beau aujourd'hui - le temps est beau - il va pleuvoir - il fait froid ce matin
il me manque vos commentaires/vos remarques vos commentaires/vos remarques me manquent