How to Say ‘Your’ in French
Votre
voh-truh
[voh-truh]
💬 Usage Tip: "Votre" means "your" for one formal person or for several people. It goes before a singular noun: "votre nom," "votre accueil."
🇫🇷 In France: French often prefers the polite form with strangers, staff, clients, and older people, so "votre" sounds respectful and normal.
Phrase Breakdown
Votre
[voh-truh]
your
Formal or plural possessive adjective meaning 'your'.
Votre table est prête.
Your table is ready.
Get the Full Learning Experience
This lesson is just a preview. Download PrettyFluent to practice pronunciation, roleplay conversations, and master vocabulary with spaced repetition.
Pronunciation Feedback
AI-powered speech recognition to perfect your accent
Spaced Repetition
Retain vocabulary long-term with smart practice
Immersive Roleplaying
Practice real conversations with AI partners
Custom Scenarios
Request lessons tailored to your specific needs
What Learners Are Saying
“Moved to Lyon for a culinary apprenticeship. The food and restaurant scenarios were exactly what I needed — my French colleagues were genuinely impressed.”
Tom H., 38, Chef
“Studying in Paris and the academic French I learned in school was useless for daily life. This app filled the gap in weeks, not months.”
Nina W., 29, Graduate Student
“Learning a language has never been as immediately impactful. Now I can charm the locals and navigate the food scene like a boss.”
Alex M., 42, Software Engineer