Que quien lo que. No es lo que dije… Lo que me gusta de Highlands es.

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Presentation transcript:

que quien lo que

No es lo que dije… Lo que me gusta de Highlands es

Que, quien, quienes, lo que Apuntes…

que = that/ who –not optional like in English

quien = who- switch to quien (quienes, if plural) after 1. a preposition(de, por, para,a, etc) 2. after a comma (set off by comma for extra info)

Lo que = what, when what is not a question ( “that which”) “What I don’t understand is…” I didn’t hear what you said.. You know what we need to practice…

©2014 by Vista Higher Learning, Inc. All rights reserved In both English and Spanish, relative pronouns (pronombres relativos) are used to combine two sentences or clauses that share a common element, such as a noun or pronoun. Study this diagram.

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©2014 by Vista Higher Learning, Inc. All rights reserved Spanish has three frequently-used relative pronouns. ¡Atención! Even though interrogative words (qué, quién, etc.) always carry an accent, relative pronouns never carry a written accent.

©2014 by Vista Higher Learning, Inc. All rights reserved Que is the most frequently used relative pronoun. It can refer to things or to people. Unlike its English counterpart, that, que is never omitted.

©2014 by Vista Higher Learning, Inc. All rights reserved The relative pronoun quien refers only to people, and is often used after a preposition or the personal a. Quien has only two forms: quien (singular) and quienes (plural).

©2014 by Vista Higher Learning, Inc. All rights reserved Quien(es) is occasionally used instead of que in clauses set off by commas.

©2014 by Vista Higher Learning, Inc. All rights reserved Unlike que and quien(es), lo que doesn’t refer to a specific noun. It refers to an idea, a situation, or a past event and means what, that which, or the thing that.