
French: ton (fr) m ta (fr) f tes (fr) m pl or f pl ( informal ), votre (fr) m or f vos (fr) m pl or f pl ( formal ). Dutch: ( informal ) je (nl), ( informal ) jouw (nl), ( formal in Standard Dutch used both formally and informally in Flemish Dutch ) uw (nl). Coptic: ⲡⲉⲕ m ( pek ), ⲧⲉⲕ f ( tek ), ⲛⲉⲕ m pl or f pl ( nek ) ( owner is male ), ⲡⲉ m ( pe ), ⲧⲉ f ( te ), ⲛⲉ m pl or f pl ( ne ) ( owner is female ). Mandarin: 你的 (zh) ( nǐ de ), 您的 (zh) ( nín de ) ( formal ) Bikol Central: saimo (bcl) ( before a noun ), mo (bcl) ( after a noun ). Asturian: to (ast), de to, so (ast) ( formal ), de so ( formal ). Armenian: ( informal ) քո (hy) ( kʿo ), ( formal ) Ձեր ( Jer ). Arabic: ـك (ar) ( -k ) ( -ak, -uk(a), etc: pronunciation differs according to case and level of language formality ) Egyptian Arabic: ـك ( -ak or k ) ( owner is male ), ـك ( -ek or ki ) ( owner is female ), بتاعك m ( bitāʕak ), بتاعك f ( bitāʕik ). Belonging to you of you related to you (singular one owner). In US English, /jɚ/ is generally the unstressed version of /jɔɹ/ in many dialects, however, /jɝ/ is frequent even in positions of stress. Homophone: yo ( non-rhotic accents with the show-sure merger ).
Homophone: yaw ( non-rhotic accents with the paw-poor merger ). Homophone: yore ( accents with the pour–poor merger ).
Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ) ( some rhotic dialects ).( non-rhotic, show-sure merger, AAVE ) IPA ( key): /joʊ/.( non-rhotic, without the horse– hoarse merger ) IPA ( key): /joə/.( rhotic, without the horse– hoarse merger ) enPR: yōr, IPA ( key): /jo(ː)ɹ/.Cognate with Saterland Frisian jou ( “ your ” ), Dutch jouw ( “ your ” ), German Low German jo, jos ( “ your ” ), German euer ( “ your ”, plural ), Danish jeres ( “ your ” ). yo, yo' ( African American Vernacular )įrom Middle English your, youre, ȝour, ȝoure, from Old English ēower, īower ( “ your ”, plural ), from Proto-West Germanic *iuwar, from Proto-Germanic *izweraz.
ur ( informal, Internet, text messaging ).