| 
 Arabic: (belonging to two persons) لَهُمَا m, f (lahumā), (belonging to many persons) لَهُم m (lahum) لَهُن f (lahun)
 Belarusian: іх (ix)
 Bulgarian: техен (téhen)
 Chinese:
 Mandarin: 他們的 (zh), 他们的 (zh) (tāmen-de), 她們的 (zh), 她们的 (zh) (tāmen-de) (of females)
 Coptic:
 Bohairic: ⲫⲱⲟⲩ m (phōw), ⲑⲱⲟⲩ f (θōw), ⲛⲟⲩⲟⲩ pl (nww)
 Sahidic: ⲡⲱⲟⲩ m (pōw), ⲧⲱⲟⲩ f (tōw), ⲛⲟⲩⲟⲩ pl (nww)
 Czech: jejich (cs)
 Dutch: het hunne, de hunne
 Egyptian: 𓅮𓄿𓇌𓏲𓏥 m (payw), 𓏏𓄿𓇌𓏲𓏥 f (tayw), 𓈖𓄿𓄿𓇌𓏲𓏥 pl (nayw), (archaic) 𓅮𓇌𓋴𓈖𓏥 m (paysn), (archaic) 𓏏𓇌𓋴𓈖𓏥 f (taysn), (archaic) 𓈖𓄿𓇌𓋴𓈖𓏥 pl (naysn)
 Egyptian Arabic: ليهم (lihom), بتاعهم m (betaʕhom), بتاعتهم f (betaʕethom), بتوعهم pl (betoʕhom)
 Esperanto: la ilia, la sia
 French: le leur (fr) f, la leur (fr) f, les leurs (fr) m pl, f pl
 Georgian: მათი (mati), იმათი (imati)
 German: (please verify)ihrs, (please verify)von ihnen 
 Hindi: उनका (hi) (unkā)
 |  | 
 Hungarian: övék (hu), övéik
 Italian: il loro m, la loro f, i loro m pl, le loro f pl
 Japanese: 彼らの (かれらの, karera-no)
 Latin: suus (la), eorum (la), earum (la), illorum, illarum, horum (la), harum (la)
 Latvian: viņu (lv), viņējs
 Macedonian: нивен (níven)
 Mazanderani: وشونی (vešuni)
 Novial: lesen
 Polish: ich (pl)
 Portuguese: seu (pt), deles (pt)
 Romanian: al lor m, a lor f, ai lor m pl, ale lor f pl
 Russian: их (ru) (ix)
 Serbo-Croatian: њихов, njihov
 Slovak: ich (sk)
 Slovene: njíhov (sl)
 Spanish: suyo (es) m, suya (es) f, suyos m pl, suyas f pl
 Swedish: deras (sv)
 Thai: ของเขา (kŏng kăo)
 Turkish: onlarınki
 Ukrainian: їх (jix)
 Urdu: ان کا (un kā)
 Vietnamese: của họ
 |