Swedish Possessive Pronouns Exercises:
hans / hennes vs sin / sitt / sina
These exercises focus on choosing the correct Swedish possessive in the third person.
The goal is to practice identifying who owns the object and choosing between:
sin / sitt / sina (reflexive: the subject owns it)
hans / hennes (non-reflexive: someone else owns it)
These exercises are suitable for A2 learners and remain relevant through B2.
For more practice, try the Swedish A2–B2 grammar units on Scriva.
How to use these exercises
Read the whole sentence carefully
Identify the subject of the clause
Ask: Does the subject own the object?
Choose the correct possessive
Try to answer before checking the solutions
Exercise 1: Choose the correct possessive
Choose the correct option: sin / sitt / sina / hans / hennes
Han hittar inte ___ nycklar.
(sin / hans)Hon pratar med ___ chef.
(sin / hennes)Han tar med ___ barn till jobbet.
(sitt / hans)Hon lånar ___ bil till helgen.
(sin / hennes)De säljer ___ hus.
(sitt / sina)
Exercise 2: Who is the owner?
Fill in the blank with the correct possessive.
Hon säger att hon har glömt ___ bok.
(sin / hennes)Hon säger att han har glömt ___ bok.
(sin / hennes)Han ser att hon stänger ___ fönster.
(sitt / hennes)De berättar att de har bytt ___ jobb.
(sitt / deras)Hon vet att han älskar ___ fru.
(sin / hans)
Exercise 3: Sentence correction (find the error)
Each sentence has one possessive mistake.
Rewrite the sentence correctly.
Hon hittar inte hennes nycklar.
Han tvättar hans bil varje helg.
Hon säger att hon älskar hennes jobb.
Han pratar med sin chef, men chefen är hennes.
De säljer sitt lägenheter.
Exercise 4: Choose the meaning
Choose the sentence that matches the meaning.
Meaning: He talks about his own family.
a) Han pratar om hans familj.
b) Han pratar om sin familj.
Meaning: He talks about her family.
a) Han pratar om sin familj.
b) Han pratar om hennes familj.
Meaning: She visits her own parents.
a) Hon besöker hennes föräldrar.
b) Hon besöker sina föräldrar.
Reminder
sin / sitt / sina → the subject owns the object
hans / hennes → someone else owns the object
Each clause decides ownership independently
Check your answers here!

