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These

These is a demonstrative word in English that functions as both a determiner and a pronoun to indicate proximity and plurality. As a determiner, it precedes a noun (these books). As a pronoun, it stands in for a noun (these are my friends). It is the plural form corresponding to "this" and forms part of a system with "this" for near-singular, "that" for far-singular, and "those" for far-plural.

Usage centers on proximity and number. These references are typically to items near the speaker and are

Etymology and history trace "these" back to Old English demonstratives, with roots in Proto-Germanic. It developed

In usage, "these" is versatile: it introduces a noun phrase, identifies items in the vicinity, or begins

See also

- This

- That

- Those

- Demonstratives

- Pronouns and determiners

used
with
plural,
countable
nouns
(for
example,
these
apples,
these
days).
They
are
not
used
with
uncountable
nouns,
where
"this"
or
"that"
is
preferred
(these
water
would
be
incorrect;
you
would
say
this
water).
As
a
pronoun,
"these"
can
stand
in
for
a
noun
phrase:
These
are
the
reasons
I
disagree,
or
These
are
mine.
as
the
near-plural
form
of
the
demonstrative
pronoun/determiner
and
has
remained
the
standard
plural
form
for
near-reference
in
Modern
English.
Related
forms
appear
in
many
Germanic
languages,
such
as
German
diese
and
Dutch
deze,
reflecting
a
common
lineage
of
demonstratives
across
the
family.
a
clause
referring
to
a
set
of
things
or
people
just
mentioned
or
understood
from
context.
It
contrasts
with
"these"
and
"those"
to
convey
proximity
and
number.