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Use of Eso(s) giving me a hard timeGrammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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Use of Eso(s) giving me a hard time
I thought I had it clear in my mind:
Este(s) for masculine near Esta(s) for feminine near Ese masc. far Esa fem. far And Eso for neutral, which means when: We don't know the gender of the object, or there is no obvious object in the sentence to where the demonstrative is referring to . Correct my mistakes up to this point, but if I am correct , why do I see phrases like: 1.This is crazy! translated as : Esto ![]() And 2.Quiero esos relojes en mi dormitorio Esto in 1. is neutral there is no subject in the phrase , why not Eso? in 2: El reloj is masculine therefore shouldn't it be Eses relojes? I hope I made my confusion clear Thank you in advance for your responses Last edited by Ean; September 16, 2020 at 09:08 PM. |
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#4
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Yes, both refer to the same idea. Since 'esto' infers a nearness and 'eso', the opposite, you may use 'esto' to convey the idea that this was a more recent topic than another, for which you might choose to use 'eso'.
I didn't mention above that 'aquello' is yet another demonstrative pronoun. It refers to an idea that is more remote than 'eso', in the mind of the speaker. I also didn't include the fact that the words I labeled as demonstrative adjectives also happen to be demonstrative pronouns, when that is their function in the sentence. I left that explanation out because it seemed easier to only identify the parts of speech used in the sentences you were concerned about, making sure you noticed the difference between the adjective form and the pronoun. When used as pronouns, they (those I categorized first as adjectives) match the gender and number of the referent. If someone asks, "¿Cuál de estos coches prefieres?" you can point at one of the objects in view and say, "Ese" (that one). If you're standing close to the vehicle you'd like, you would say, "Este" (this one). Last edited by Rusty; September 17, 2020 at 11:23 AM. |
#6
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Distance from the speaker can be the factor used with the non-neuter demonstrative pronouns, since their referent is a noun--this, that, that over there. (And if the object isn't known to you, the neuter form should be used.)
When it comes to the neuter demonstrative pronouns that refer to an idea, how long ago (what time, when) would be the factor. I use 'esto' to refer to the topic at hand (current topic, something just said), while 'eso' refers to a previous topic, and 'aquello' refers to a topic preceding the others just mentioned. |
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