Demonstrative Adjectives
[A1] Demonstrative Adjectives in English explain how this, that, these, and those modify nouns. Learn the forms, usage rules, and clear examples of English demonstratives.
Core idea
Demonstrative adjectives point to a specific noun and show which one you mean. They answer โwhich?โ and always come right before the noun they modify. English demonstrative adjectives are this, that, these, and those. They do not change for gender, but they do change for number and often imply distance.
Which of the following words are the English demonstrative adjectives?
This vs that
Use this to point to one noun that feels near in space, time, or the conversation. Use that to point to one noun that feels farther away, earlier, less immediate, or already established. Distance can be physical, emotional, or contextual, not only literal location.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the correct demonstrative: '____ idea feels important right now.'
These vs those
Use these to point to multiple nouns that feel near or immediate. Use those to point to multiple nouns that feel farther away, less immediate, or already separated from the speakerโs current focus. Like this and that, the idea of distance can be literal or contextual.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which fits best: '____ cookies smell great.'
Number agreement
Demonstrative adjectives must match the noun in singular or plural. Use this and that with singular count nouns. Use these and those with plural count nouns. With noncount nouns, use singular forms this or that because the noun is treated as one amount or substance.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the correct demonstrative: '____ chair is comfortable.'
Position in noun phrase
Demonstrative adjectives come before the noun and usually before any other descriptive adjectives. They are determiners, so they occupy the โdeterminer slotโ at the start of the noun phrase. This means you generally choose a demonstrative instead of other determiners like a, an, the, my, or some.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the grammatically correct sentence.
Demonstrative vs pronoun
Demonstratives can be adjectives or pronouns. They are demonstrative adjectives when they modify a noun that appears right after them. They are demonstrative pronouns when they stand alone and replace the noun. The forms are the same, so the difference is whether a noun follows.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
In the sentence 'This movie is long.' is 'This' an adjective or a pronoun?
Discourse use
Demonstrative adjectives help organize information in speech and writing. This often introduces or highlights something you are focusing on right now in the text or conversation. That often refers back to something already mentioned, something the listener should already recognize, or something you are distancing yourself from emotionally.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which demonstrative best introduces a point you are developing now: '____ problem has two causes.'
Time and events
Demonstrative adjectives often point to time periods and events. This tends to connect to the present or the speakerโs current period. That tends to point to a more distant time or a period separated from now. Context decides what counts as near or far.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which demonstrative fits: '____ morning I had meetings.'
With place words
Demonstrative adjectives often appear with location phrases to help identify the noun. This and these pair naturally with here, and that and those pair naturally with there, especially in spoken English. The location phrase is optional, but it strengthens the sense of distance.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the natural pairing: '____ restaurant here is good.' or '____ restaurant there is good.' Which matches 'this' and 'that'?
Wrap-up
Choose the demonstrative based on number and the kind of โdistanceโ you want to express. Use this and these for near, immediate, or currently focused nouns, and that and those for farther, less immediate, or previously mentioned nouns. Place the demonstrative before the noun, and use it as your main determiner in the noun phrase.
Choose the best demonstrative: singular and near โ '____ song is my favorite.'















