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Pronouns

How personal, possessive, and demonstrative pronouns work in Spanish, English and Chinese.

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Pronouns replace nouns to avoid repetition. Spanish has a complex system with six verb conjugations per person, English distinguishes gender only in third person singular, and Chinese uses a single form for all persons with context for disambiguation.

Examples

First person singular

yo

Second person singular (informal)

Second person singular (formal)

usted

Third person masculine

él

Third person feminine

ella

Possessive first person

mi / mío

Possessive third person

su / suyo

Demonstrative (near)

este / esta

Demonstrative (far)

ese / esa / aquel

Examples

First person singular

I

Second person singular (informal)

you

Second person singular (formal)

you

Third person masculine

he

Third person feminine

she

Possessive first person

my / mine

Possessive third person

his / hers / their

Demonstrative (near)

this

Demonstrative (far)

that

Examples

First person singular

Second person singular (informal)

Second person singular (formal)

nín

Third person masculine

Third person feminine

Possessive first person

de

Possessive third person

/de

Demonstrative (near)

zhège

Demonstrative (far)

ge

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
First person singular yoI
Second person singular (informal) you
Second person singular (formal) ustedyounín
Third person masculine élhe
Third person feminine ellashe
Possessive first person mi / míomy / minede
Possessive third person su / suyohis / hers / their/de
Demonstrative (near) este / estathiszhège
Demonstrative (far) ese / esa / aquelthatge

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
First person singular yoI
Second person singular (informal) you
Second person singular (formal) ustedyounín
Third person masculine élhe
Third person feminine ellashe
Possessive first person mi / míomy / minede
Possessive third person su / suyohis / hers / their/de
Demonstrative (near) este / estathiszhège
Demonstrative (far) ese / esa / aquelthatge

Examples in context

First person singular

Spanish

yo

English

I

Chinese

Second person singular (informal)

Spanish

English

you

Chinese

Second person singular (formal)

Spanish

usted

English

you

Chinese

nín

Third person masculine

Spanish

él

English

he

Chinese

Third person feminine

Spanish

ella

English

she

Chinese

Possessive first person

Spanish

mi / mío

English

my / mine

Chinese

de

Possessive third person

Spanish

su / suyo

English

his / hers / their

Chinese

/de

Demonstrative (near)

Spanish

este / esta

English

this

Chinese

zhège

Demonstrative (far)

Spanish

ese / esa / aquel

English

that

Chinese

ge

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Highly inflected. Verbs conjugate for person, number, tense, and mood, which allows pronoun dropping. Three levels of formality in second pe...

English: Minimal inflection. Pronouns are the main way to mark grammatical person. Gender distinction only in third person singular.

Chinese: No inflection at all. Context, word order, and optional particles disambiguate meaning. One spoken form covers multiple written forms.

Key concepts compared: First person singular, Second person singular (informal), Second person singular (formal).

Last updated: June 4, 2026