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1.11: Demonstrative Pronouns

  • Page ID
    182778
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    Demonstrative pronouns substitute for things being pointed out. They include this, that, these, and those. This and that are singular; these and those are plural.

    GPS location symbols connected by dotted lineThe difference between this and that and between these and those is a little more subtle. This and these refer to something that is “close” to the speaker, whether this closeness is physical, emotional, or temporal. That and those are the opposite: they refer to something that is “far.”

    • Do I actually have to read all of this?
      • The speaker is indicating a text that is close to her, by using “this.”
    • That is not coming anywhere near me.
      • The speaker is distancing himself from the object in question, which he doesn’t want to get any closer. The far pronoun helps indicate that.
    • You’re telling me you sewed all of these?
      • The speaker and her audience are likely looking directly at the clothes in question, so the close pronoun is appropriate.
    • Those are all gross.
      • The speaker wants to remain away from the gross items in question, by using the far “those.”

    Note: these pronouns are often combined with a noun. When this happens, they act as a kind of adjective instead of as a pronoun.

    • Do I actually have to read all of this contract?
    • That thing is not coming anywhere near me.
    • You’re telling me you sewed all of these dresses?
    • Those recipes are all gross.

    The antecedents of demonstrative pronouns (and sometimes the pronoun it) can be more complex than those of personal pronouns:

    • Animal Planet’s puppy cam has been taken down for maintenance. I never wanted this to happen.
    • I love Animal Planet’s panda cam. I watched a panda eat bamboo for half an hour. It was amazing.

    In the first example, the antecedent for this is the concept of the puppy cam being taken down. In the second example, the antecedent for it in this sentence is the experience of watching the panda. That antecedent isn’t explicitly stated in the sentence, but comes through in the intention and meaning of the speaker.

    Practice

    In the following sentences, determine if this, that, these, or those should be used.

    1. Lara looked at her meal in front of her. “____ looks great!” she said.
    2. Tyesha watched the ’67 Mustang drive down the street. “What I wouldn’t give for one of ____.”
    3. “What do you think of ____?” Ashley asked, showing me the three paint samples she had picked out.

    [reveal-answer q=”727295″]Show Answer[/reveal-answer]
    [hidden-answer a=”727295″]

    1. Lara looked at her meal in front of her. “This looks great!” she said.
      • The meal is right in front of Lara, and there is only one meal. This is the correct pronoun.
    2. Tyesha watched the ’67 Mustang drive down the street. “What I wouldn’t give for one of those.”
      • The Mustang is far away (and getting further away as it drives off). The phrase “one of ____” requires a plural word in the blank. Those is the correct pronoun. A singular version of the sentence would be something like “What I wouldn’t give to own that.” That is the correct pronoun for singular things that are far away.
    3. “What do you think of these?” Ashley asked, showing me the three paint samples she had picked out.
      • The paint samples are in immediate focus (whether Ashley is holding them or looking at them online), and there are three of them. These is the correct pronoun.

    [/hidden-answer]

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