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Those

Those is a plural demonstrative word in English used to refer to people or things that are not near the speaker. It denotes items that are farther away in space or time, or that have already been identified in discourse. Those works contrast with this/these, which refer to items closer to the speaker.

Grammatically, those can function as a determiner before a plural noun, as in those cars or those

Usage notes include that those can refer to both people and things. It is common to use

Typically, those is used when the speaker intends distance either physically or conceptually, and it can introduce

days.
It
can
also
act
as
a
pronoun,
standing
in
for
a
noun
phrase:
Those
are
my
friends;
I
don’t
want
those.
The
singular
counterparts
are
that
(for
a
single
item)
and
these
(for
items
near
the
speaker).
those
with
adjectives
or
compounds,
such
as
those
people,
those
ideas,
or
those
old
memories.
In
speech,
the
choice
between
those,
these,
that,
and
this
helps
convey
distance
and
familiarity
in
addition
to
quantity.
a
clause
or
a
noun
phrase,
as
in
“Those
who
arrived
early
were
rewarded”
or
“I’d
like
those
photos.”
It
remains
a
versatile
and
frequent
element
in
everyday
English,
compatible
with
formal
and
informal
registers.