This, That, These, Those: English Demonstratives
English uses four demonstratives to point things out by distance and number. Use "this" for one thing nearby and "that" for one thing far away, as in "This is my phone." Switch to the plural "these" for nearby things and "those" for far-away things, as in "I like these shoes" and "Those are expensive." The key habit is matching number: never say "this shoes" or "these book" — the demonstrative and its noun must agree.
Examples
- This is my phone. the nearby object is the speaker's phone
- Those are expensive. the far-away things cost a lot
- I like these shoes. the speaker likes the nearby shoes
The full lesson
Everything in the video, in text.
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Four tiny words let you point at anything in English — and two simple questions tell you exactly which one to use.
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These are called demonstratives — they point things out. To choose the right one, ask yourself just two questions: Is it near me or far from me? And is it one thing or more than one?
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First, distance. Use this and these for things close to you — within reach. Use that and those for things further away.
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Now add number, and all four fall into place. This and that are singular — one thing. These and those are plural — more than one. Here's the full picture.
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Let's see them work. One thing, close to me, takes this. This is my phone.
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Move it across the room, and the same single thing becomes that. That is my phone.
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Now more than one, close by. Plural and near means these. Notice it sits right before the noun. I like these shoes.
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More than one, far away, takes those. And here it stands alone — no noun needed, because we already know what we're pointing at. Those are expensive.
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They work before a noun too. In a shop, reaching for one nearby jacket: Can I try this jacket?
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And pointing across the street at a group of people far away: Who are those people?
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Here's the mistake learners make most. The demonstrative must match the number of the noun. Shoes is plural, so this shoes is wrong — it has to be these shoes.
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It works the other way too. Many languages use one word for near things no matter the number — but English doesn't. These book is wrong for a single book; it's this book.
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So always ask the two questions: near or far, one or many. Match the number every time, and these four words become automatic.