my
determiner
uk/maɪ/us/maɪ/A1
of orbelongingto me(= thespeakerorwriter):
我的myparents我的父母
myfeet我的脚
myname我的名字
myjacket我的夹克
It wasn't myfault.这不是我的错。
formalShe wassomewhatsurprisedat myasking(= that Iasked)for thebookto bereturned.我要她还书她感到相当惊讶。
See also
I, i(LETTER)
mepronoun
minepronoun
my own
used toemphasizethat somethingbelongsto or isconnectedwith me and no oneelse:
我自己的Iwantmy owncar.我想要一辆我自己的小汽车。
It was my owndecision.那是我自己的决定。
Thiscakeisallmy ownwork(= I made it withouthelp).这个蛋糕完全是我自己做的。
used infrontof anounas a way ofexpressingloveor as apoliteorhumorousformofaddress:
(用于名词前,构成表示爱、礼貌或幽默语气的称呼语)Mydarling!我亲爱的!
Do youwantanyhelp, mydear?你需要帮助吗,亲爱的?
relatingto apartof somewebsiteswhere you canchoosetoseeonly theinformationthat isimportantto you
我的网页的(指网页上可选择的部分,只显示个人认为重要的信息)- I'msureIleftmypurseon thedesk.
- I haven't had myholidayphotosdevelopedyet.
- Ifailedmy History Alevel.
- I had achatwith mybosstoday about apossiblesalaryincrease.
- Both myparentsareteachers.
Linguistics: possessive forms
- hers
- his
- its
- mine
- our
- ours
- S, s
- the
- their
- theirs
- thine
- thy
- us
- yer
- your
- yours
You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics:
Having and owning - general words
Affectionate terms of address
Internet terminology
Grammar
Pronouns: possessive (my,mine,your,yours, etc.)
We use pronouns to refer to possession and ‘belonging’. There are two types: possessive pronouns and possessive determiners. We use possessive determiners before a noun. We use possessive pronouns in place of a noun:…my
exclamation
old-fashioneduk/maɪ/us/maɪ/used toexpresssurpriseorpleasure:
(表示惊讶或高兴)噢My, whatdeliciousfood!噢,多么美味的食物啊!
My, oh, my, what abusyday!哎呀,天哪,多忙的一天啊!
Expressions of surprise
- accha
- achha
- actually
- ay
- begorrah
- blow
- fancy
- glory
- heaven
- heavens (above)!idiom
- hell's bells
- hold onidiom
- how about that?idiom
- I ask you!idiom
- omg
- sheesh
- shit
- shock, horror!idiom
- shut
- shut the front door!idiom
Grammar
Pronouns: possessive (my,mine,your,yours, etc.)
We use pronouns to refer to possession and ‘belonging’. There are two types: possessive pronouns and possessive determiners. We use possessive determiners before a noun. We use possessive pronouns in place of a noun:…