duquju yakeho pogeha qomiguka wejice

Personal Pronouns

Personal pronouns in Spanish replace nouns and indicate the person speaking (first person), the person being spoken to (second person), or the person or thing being spoken about (third person). They also indicate number (singular or plural).

  • First person singular: yo (I)
  • Second person singular: tú (you, informal)
  • Third person singular: él (he), ella (she), ello (it)
  • First person plural: nosotros/nosotras (we)
  • Second person plural: vosotros/vosotras (you, plural, informal)
  • Third person plural: ellos/ellas (they)

Possessive Pronouns

Possessive pronouns in Spanish indicate ownership or possession. They agree in gender and number with the possessed noun.

  • mi/mis (my)
  • tu/tus (your, informal singular)
  • su/sus (his, her, its, your formal)
  • nuestro/nuestra, nuestros/nuestras (our)
  • vuestro/vuestra, vuestros/vuestras (your, plural informal)
  • su/sus (their)

Demonstrative Pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns in Spanish point out or identify a specific noun. They agree in gender and number with the noun they replace.

  • este/esta/esto (this)
  • ese/esa/eso (that)
  • aquel/aquella/aquello (that over there)

Demonstrative pronouns can also be used with nouns to specify which one is being referred to: este libro (this book), esa casa (that house), aquellos niños (those children over there).

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