Home

Forming Sentences in Spanish with Demonstrative Pronouns

|
|  Updated:  
2023-05-09 19:09:25
|   From The Book:  
No items found.
Spanish Phrases For Dummies
Explore Book
Buy On Amazon

Demonstrative pronouns can make your Spanish flow more naturally in both writing and conversation. So how exactly can you go about forming sentences with demonstrative pronouns? First, you need to understand what they stand for and how they translate in Spanish. Then you’ll be ready to absorb the basics of their usage.

Demonstrative pronouns, which replace demonstrative adjectives and their nouns, express this (one), that (one), these (ones), or those (ones). The only difference between a demonstrative adjective and a demonstrative pronoun in terms of writing is the addition of an accent to the pronoun, as you can see in the following table.

Spanish Demonstrative Pronouns

Number Masculine Feminine Meaning Distance
Singular/Plural éste/éstos ésta/éstas this (one)/these (ones) Near to or directly concerned with speaker
Singular/Plural ése/ésos ésa/ésas that (one)/those (ones) Not particularly near to or directly concerned with speaker
Singular/Plural aquél/aquéllos aquélla/aquéllas that (one)/those (ones) Far from and not directly concerned with speaker

The following list shows some examples of these demonstrative pronouns in action:

  • Mire éstos y ésta también. (Look at these and this one, too.)

  • Quiero ése y ésas. (I want that and those.)

  • Aquél es viejo y aquélla es moderno. (That one is old and that one is modern.)

Here’s what you need to know about demonstrative pronouns in Spanish:

  • They agree in number and gender with the nouns they replace:

    Me gusta este coche y ésos. (I like this car and those.)

  • You use a form of aquél to express the former and a form of éste to express the latter:

    Patricia es la hermana de Francisco; éste es rubio y aquélla es morena. (Patricia is the sister of Francisco; Francisco [the latter] is blond and Patricia [the former] is brunette.)

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

No items found.

About the book author:

Gail Stein, MA, was a foreign language instructor for more than 30 years and wrote Intermediate Spanish For Dummies.