Questions & Answers about Questo ombrello è tuo.
Why does the possessive tuo come after the noun instead of before it?
In Italian, when a possessive adjective follows the verb essere (“to be”), it acts as a predicative adjective and comes after the noun: Questo ombrello è tuo (“This umbrella is yours”). When you use a possessive attributively (directly before the noun), it precedes the noun and requires the definite article: il tuo ombrello.
Why is there no definite article before tuo in Questo ombrello è tuo?
Why is it questo ombrello and not quello ombrello?
Why is the demonstrative questo and not questa?
Could I say Questo è il tuo ombrello instead? Is there a difference?
Can I simply say È tuo without mentioning questo ombrello?
How would I turn this into the plural: “These umbrellas are yours”?
Can I express possession with di te, as in Questo ombrello è di te?
How would I ask “Is this umbrella yours?” in Italian?
AI Language TutorTry it ↗
“What's the best way to learn Italian grammar?”
Italian grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.
Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor
Start learning ItalianMaster Italian — from Questo ombrello è tuo to fluency
All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods, no signup needed.
- ✓Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
- ✓Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
- ✓Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
- ✓ AI tutor to answer your grammar questions