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A1 Dutch GrammarPossessive Adjectives

Learn Dutch possessive adjectives (mijn, jouw, zijn, etc.) and how they work with de-words and het-words. Understand the difference between stressed and unstressed forms.

1Basic Possessive Adjectives

Dutch possessives come before the noun and don't change for de/het words in standard form. Each person has one basic form.

Possessive Adjectives

PersonDutchEnglish
ikmijnmy
jijjouw / jeyour (informal)
uuwyour (formal)
hijzijnhis
zijhaarher
hetzijnits
wijons / onzeour
julliejullieyour (plural)
zijhuntheir

Examples

Dit is mijn boek.

This is my book.

mijn = my

Waar is jouw tas?

Where is your bag?

jouw = your

Zijn huis is groot.

His house is big.

zijn = his

Haar auto is rood.

Her car is red.

haar = her

2Ons vs Onze

'Our' has two forms: 'ons' with het-words (singular), 'onze' with de-words and all plurals. This is the only possessive that changes.

Ons vs Onze

ArticleFormExample
het (singular)onsons huis (our house)
de (singular)onzeonze auto (our car)
pluralonzeonze kinderen (our children)
pluralonzeonze huizen (our houses)

Examples

Ons huis is oud.

Our house is old.

het huis → ons

Onze hond heet Max.

Our dog is called Max.

de hond → onze

Onze kinderen zijn groot.

Our children are big.

plural → onze

Dit is ons kantoor.

This is our office.

het kantoor → ons

3Stressed vs Unstressed Forms

'Je' is the unstressed form of 'jouw', 'ze' can replace 'haar'. Use stressed forms for emphasis or contrast, unstressed in normal speech.

Stressed vs Unstressed

StressedUnstressedEnglish
mijnm'nmy
jouwjeyour
haard'r / zeher
zijnz'nhis

Examples

Is dit je fiets?

Is this your bike?

je = unstressed

Nee, dat is jouw fiets!

No, that is YOUR bike!

jouw = stressed/emphatic

Ik ken z'n vader.

I know his father.

z'n = unstressed zijn

Dat is m'n probleem niet.

That's not my problem.

m'n = unstressed mijn

4Possessives with Body Parts

Unlike English, Dutch often uses 'de/het' instead of possessives with body parts when the owner is clear from context.

Body Parts

DutchLiteralNatural English
Ik was de handen.I wash the hands.I wash my hands.
Hij breekt het been.He breaks the leg.He breaks his leg.
Zij borstelt het haar.She brushes the hair.She brushes her hair.
Doe de ogen dicht.Close the eyes.Close your eyes.

Examples

Ik was de handen.

I wash my hands.

de, not mijn

Mijn hoofd doet pijn.

My head hurts.

possessive also correct

Ze doet de jas aan.

She puts on her coat.

de jas, not haar jas

Ik steek mijn hand op.

I raise my hand.

mijn for clarity