This article was co-authored by Megan CallaghanPhD. Megan Morgan is an Academic Advising and Writing expert based in AugustaGeorgia. She has over 7 years of university teaching experience and more than 15 years of professional editing experience. She works as an intern for the Law Library of Congressand is also a Professional Writing Center Consultant at Augusta University. Her key academic interests involve reference and subject librarianshipgovernment informationand information organization. She provides personalized writing instructionworkshopsand support for AU studentsfacultyand staff. Previouslyshe worked as a Graduate Program Administrator at the University of Georgia’s School of Public and International Affairs. She was a Graduate Advisor for three degrees in the departments of Political Science and International Affairs at the University of Georgia College of Arts and Sciences. She earned her Master’s in Library and Information Science from Valdosta State University. She also received both a PhD and MA in English from The University of Georgiaand a BA in English and Creative Writing from the Mississippi University for Women. She wrote her PhD dissertation on narrative structure and social change in novels by 18th-century British women writers.
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These and those are both pronounswords that substitute for other nouns in a sentence. Knowing when to use each pronoun can be trickyhowever. If you're confused about when to use these and thoseread on to find out the difference between them.
Steps
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Understand the function of pronouns. These and those are both pronounswords that refer to or substitute for other nouns in the sentence. They draw attention to something specific. Because a pronoun takes the place of another nounusing the correct one helps your reader understand what the referent of the pronoun is (i.e.what noun it took the place of).[1] X Trustworthy Source Purdue Online Writing Lab Trusted resource for writing and citation guidelines Go to source
- These and those are plural pronouns: they refer to or replace plural nouns.
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Understand pronoun agreement. "Agreement" means that the pronoun takes the same number as the noun it replaces. If the noun is singularyou would use this or that. If the noun is pluralyou would use these or those.[2] X Research source
- American English considers collective nouns, or nouns that refer to a large group of things that cannot be counted individually (such as milk or data)as singular nouns. Use this or that rather that these or those for collective nouns. For example: "This milk has spilled all over the floor!"
- British English differs from American English in using collective nouns. British English refers to some collective nouns such as crowd or data as pluralso it is appropriate to use these or those in British English. For example: "These data don't match the graphs you gave me."
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Understand the function of these. These is the plural form of this. You will use it to refer to or replace a plural noun.[3] X Research source
- Singular: This book (a single book) on the shelf next to me belongs to Rajeev.
- Plural: These books (several books) on the shelf next to me belong to Rajeev. [Note that the verb belong has also been made to agree in number.]
- Singular: Look at this bracelet (a single bracelet) on my wrist!
- Plural: Look at these bracelets (many bracelets) on my wrist!
- Singular: Who put this cupcake (a single cupcake) in the refrigerator?
- Plural: Who put these cupcakes (some cupcakes) in the refrigerator?
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Understand the function of those. Those is the plural form of that. You will use it to refer to or replace a plural noun.[4] X Research source
- Singular: That mountain (a mountain) looks really small from here.
- Plural: Those mountains (several mountains) look really small from here. [Note that the verb look has also been made to agree in number.]
- Singular: Could you hand me that box (a box) on the other side of the room?
- Plural: Could you hand me those boxes (a few boxes) on the other side of the room?
- Singular: Why hasn't that scientist (a scientist) at NASA found extraterrestrial life?
- Plural: Why haven't those scientists (many scientists) at NASA found extraterrestrial life? [Note that the verb have has also been made to agree in number.]
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Use these to replace nouns that are nearby in space and time. If the noun you are referring to is near to youeither physically or figurativelyyou can replace it with these.
- I'm holding three chocolate bars. Do you want all of these? (These replaces chocolate bars.)
- Would you like to borrow some books? Heretake these. (These replaces books.)
- These are so beautiful! Thank you for the flowers. (These replaces flowers.)
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Use these to refer to something that is physically nearby. This and these are both used to refer to something that is closer to the speaker. You can use these to draw particular attention to items.[5] X Research source
- These books on the shelf belong to Rajeev. [The books are near the speaker.]
- Look at all these bracelets on my wrist! [The bracelets are on the speaker's wristso they're nearby.]
- Who put these cupcakes in the refrigerator? [Presumablythe speaker is close to the cupcakes.]
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Use these to describe when something is figuratively nearby. This and these are also used to express figurative distancesparticularly distances having to do with time. Use these when something is happening in the presenthas happened in the recent pastor will happen in the near future.[6] X Research source
- These shows I've been watching are absolutely extraordinary. [The shows have been watched in the recent past.]
- Have you seen these letters to the editor in today's news? [The letters have been published in today's newspaper.]
- Why don't you take these books with you when you go? [The books will be taken by the other person in the near future.]
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Use these to introduce people to others. If you are introducing more than one person to someone elseyou can use these to begin your sentence.[7] X Research source
- For example: "These are my classmatesSean and Adrienne."
- Howeverin English we do not use these to refer directly to people: "These are Sean and Adrienne" is incorrect. Insteadyou would say "This is Sean and this is Adrienne."
- If introducing yourselfas when answering the phoneuse this: "Hellothis is Chang."
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Use "those" to replace nouns that are farther away in space and time. If the noun you are referring to is far from youeither physically or figurativelyyou can replace it with those
- That man over there is holding three chocolate bars. Do you want all of those? (Those replaces chocolate bars.)
- Would you like to borrow some books ? Take those over there on the shelf. (Those replaces books.)
- Those were so beautiful! Thank you for the flowers you gave me yesterday. (Those replaces flowers.)
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Use those when something is physically far away (relatively speaking). That and those are both used to refer to something that is farther away from the speaker. This distance can be literal or more figurative. Using those can draw attention or emphasis to the noun you're discussing.[8] X Research source
- Those mountains look really small from here. [The mountains are far away from the speaker.]
- Could you hand me those boxes on the other side of the room? [The boxes are on the other side of the room.]
- Why haven't those scientists at NASA found extraterrestrial life? [The speaker may be emphasizing that they don't feel connected to the NASA scientists.]
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Use those to describe when something is figuratively more distant. That and those are used to express figurative distances tooparticularly distances having to do with time. Use those when something has happened in the relatively distant past or will happen in the relatively distant future.[9] X Research source
- Those shows I watched last week were absolutely extraordinary. [The shows were watched some time ago.]
- Did you see those letters to the editor in yesterday's news? [The letters were published in the past.]
- Why do all those politicians fight so much? [The speaker may be emphasizing a feeling of personal distance from the politicians.]
Usage Chart
Community Q&A
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QuestionShould I use 'this/that' or 'these/those' for a pair of shoes or jeansand why?
Community AnswerUse the 'this/that' when you refer to shoes or jeans as a 'pair;' but you should use 'these/those' when you just say 'shoes' or 'jeans.' The word 'pair' is treated as singular and 'shoes' or 'jeans' as plural. -
QuestionCan I say"this/these is/are the news"?
DonaganTop AnswererNews is considered a singular entity. "This is the news." -
Question"Those are three pretty girls" or "Those three are pretty girls" - which is correct?
Community AnswerThey are both grammatically correctbut the first one is more natural and more likely to be used.
Video
Tips
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If you can't count the number of objects you're talking about (like milksoftwareor rain)use this or that.Thanks
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If you can count the number of objects you're talking about (like pencilssheepor people) use these' or those.Thanks
References
- ↑ https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/grammar/pronouns/index.html
- ↑ https://www.niu.edu/writingtutorial/grammar/pronoun-agreement.shtml
- ↑ https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/grammar/british-grammar/this-that-these-those
- ↑ https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/grammar/british-grammar/this-that-these-those
- ↑ https://www.grammar.cl/Notes/This_That_These_Those.htm
- ↑ http://www.theenglishspace.com/grammar/demonstratives.html
- ↑ https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/english-grammar-reference/demonstratives
- ↑ https://www.grammar.cl/Notes/This_That_These_Those.htm
- ↑ https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/grammar/british-grammar/this-that-these-those
About This Article
If you’re not sure how to use the words “these” and “those” correctlytry to remember that “these” refers to multiple objects which are nearby in space and timewhile “those” refers to objects which are far away. For exampleyou might say"I loved those cookies you made yesterday," or you could say "These books are making my backpack really heavy!" To learn more about the functions of pronouns from our English reviewerread on!
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