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Demonstratives

Demonstratives are words used to point to or identify a noun in relation to the speaker, listener, or discourse context. They function as deictic expressions, signaling proximity or distance in space, time, or reference within a conversation. Demonstratives can serve as determiners (demonstrative adjectives) that modify a noun, or as stand-alone pronouns that replace a noun phrase. They may also appear as adverbs of place or as discourse markers.

In English, the core demonstratives are this, that, these, and those. This and these refer to items

Cross-linguistically, demonstratives form systems that encode distance and sometimes visibility or accessibility. Many languages distinguish proximal,

near
the
speaker,
while
that
and
those
refer
to
items
farther
away.
Examples
include
this
book,
these
ideas,
that
chair,
those
cars.
Demonstratives
can
modify
a
noun
(this
idea)
or
stand
alone
as
pronouns
(these
are
mine).
They
can
also
function
as
adverbs
of
place
(here,
there)
and
as
discourse
devices
that
introduce
or
refer
back
to
information
in
conversation
(This
is
what
I
meant).
medial,
and
distal
forms,
or
near
and
far
with
additional
degrees
of
distance.
Some
languages
also
reflect
grammatical
categories
such
as
gender,
case,
or
clusivity
in
demonstratives.
Examples
include
Spanish
este/esta/estos/estas
(near)
and
ese/esa/esos/esas
(far),
French
ce/cet/ces,
Japanese
kono/sono/ano,
and
Latin
hic/ille.
The
precise
inventory
and
usage
patterns
vary
by
language,
but
the
basic
role
remains:
to
anchor
reference
to
a
noun
within
a
spatial,
temporal,
or
discourse
context.