In its singular form as 'règle' ['rule', 'ruler'], the feminine gender noun takes 'ma'. The word 'ma' is the feminine form of the possessive 'my' in the singular. In its plural form as 'règles' ['rules', 'rulers'], the noun takes 'mes' as the feminine form of the possessive 'my' in the plural.
The word "my" in French is "mon" (masculine), "ma" (feminine), or "mes" (plural).
You can say "avec mes potes" in French to mean "with my mates."
Bonjour mes enfants
I do my homework is "je fais mes devoirs" in French.
"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.
Mon/Ma/Mes
The word "my" in French is "mon" (masculine), "ma" (feminine), or "mes" (plural).
two sisters is the translation for the French 'deux soeurs'.
Mes is a plural possessive meaning 'my' in French. Ex: Mes enfants > my children; mes voitures > my cars
Je plus mes is French for "I further my"
mes papiers, mes dossiers, mes documents
mes peurs / mes frayeurs / mes angoisses
mes grandparents
mes amis - my friends
mes habits / mes vêtements
Voir mes amis means 'to see my friends' in French.
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)