OnlineSpanishClub.com

Learning Spanish? Join our online club!

  • Home
  • Join
  • Latest
  • Free Easy Reader
  • Free Parallel Text
  • Ebooks Store
  • Free Spanish Conversation Prompts
  • Online Teachers
  • Other…
You are here: Home / Spanish Grammar 106 Demonstratives

Spanish Grammar 106 Demonstratives

There are two types of demonstratives: demonstrative adjectives and demonstrative pronouns.

A demonstrative adjective is a word used to describe a noun.
A demonstrative pronoun is the word which takes the place of a noun.

First, demonstrative adjectives. There are various forms, depending on the gender of the noun /object (masculine or feminine), whether it’s singular or plural, and whether the noun is perceived as being close to us or not.

Masculine singular:

este (this)
ese (that)
aquel (that one over there)

Masculine plural:

estos
esos
aquellos

Feminine singular:

esta
esa
aquella

Feminine plural:

estas
esas
aquellas

In total there are 12 forms of demonstrative adjectives, divided into 3 groups according to their perceived distance from us:

este libro (this book)
estos libros (these books)
esta pluma (this pen)
estas plumas (these pens)

ese libro (that book)
esos libros (those books)
esa pluma (that pen)
esas plumas (those pens)

aquel libro (that book over there)
aquellos libros (those books over there)
aquella pluma (that pen over there)
aquellas plumas (those pens over there)

Here are the corresponding demonstrative pronouns:

este (this one – masculine)
estos (these ones – masculine)
esta (this one – feminine)
estas (these ones – feminine)

ese (that one – masculine)
esos (those ones – masculine)
esa (that one – feminine)
esas (those ones – feminine)

aquel (that one over there – masc.)
aquellos (those ones over there – masc.)
aquella (that one over there – fem.)
aquellas (those ones over there – fem.)

Each demonstrative pronoun also has a neuter form. They do not change according to number or gender, and they are used to refer to abstract ideas, or to an unknown object:

esto (this matter, this thing)
eso (that matter, that thing)
aquello (that matter/thing over there)

*In the past the demonstrative pronouns always carried a written accent, while the demonstrative adjectives did not.

Learning another language?

Ebooks for Learning Spanish

Logo of EasyReaders.org, Spanish easy readers, Spanish/English parallel texts

Someone to practice with?

Logo of NativeSpeakerTeachers.com, one-to-one Spanish lessons on Skype or Zoom

All Rights Reserved · © Copyright EASY READERS LLP Registered in England, no. OC439580 Tregarth, The Gounce, Perranporth, Cornwall, England TR6 0JW · info@easyreaders.org