Descargar la presentación
La descarga está en progreso. Por favor, espere
Publicada porPedro Espejo Contreras Modificado hace 9 años
1
Pronombre Relativo QUEQUIEN QUEQUIEN CUYO CUYO LO QUE LO QUE CUYO LO QUE EL QUE EL QUEEL QUEEL QUE
2
Pronombres Relativos Pronouns are words that refer to a noun. "Relative"pronouns are called "relative" because they are "related" to Pronouns are words that refer to a noun. "Relative"pronouns are called "relative" because they are "related" to a noun that has previously been stated.
3
Pronombres Relativos Relative pronouns combine two sentences that share a common noun. The milk is cold. You bought milk. The milk that you bought is cold. La leche está helada Tú compraste leche. La leche que compraste esta helada
4
Pronombres Relativos The relative pronoun is often omitted in English, but it is never omitted in Spanish. La casa que compramos es nueva. The house (that) we bought is new. El programa que miraba era cómico. The show (that) I was watching was comical.
5
Que Que". It can be used to refer to both persons and things. Que" is the Spanish equivalent of the English words who, whom, which, and that. Los libros que son extensos... (thing, subject The books which are long La señorita que conocí... (person, object) The young lady whom I met La carta que leiste... (thing, object) The letter that you read
6
Pronombre Relativo QUIEN
7
QUIEN The relative pronoun "quien" is used only to refer to people. There is no gender distinction but number agreement. My uncle, who is a professor, is coming to visit me today. Mi tío, quien es profesor, viene a visitarme hoy día. Las chicas, con quienes fui al cine, son mis amigas.
8
QUIEN When the relative pronoun refers to a person and is in the direct object position, either "que" or "a quien" may be used. La señorita que conocí anoche es la hermana de Raquel. When the relative pronoun is preceded by a preposition and the noun is a person only “quien” may be used. La señorita a quien conocí anoche es la hermana de Raquel.
9
Pronombre Relativo WHOSE
10
CUYO – CUYOS – CUYA – CUYAS Separates the owner and that which is owned. Nearly always introduce or set up a nonnon restrictive clauserestrictive clause. Juan, whose father is from Paris, speaks French. Juan, cuyo padre es de Paris, habla frances
11
Pronombre Relativo WHAT or WHATEVER
12
LO QUE Is a neutral relative pronoun that allows you to refer to a great abstraction. When is used to mean “whatever” it often stands for something that is unknown or doubtful.
13
LO QUE Lo que tu quieres no existe. El carro que tu quieres no existe Tienes la camisa que necesito. Tienes lo que necesito.
14
“EL/LA QUE” “EL/LA CUAL” When the relative pronouns that, which, who or whom introduce a nonrestrictive clause you can use “el que” or “el cual” instead of the simple “que”. “El que” and “el cual” are interchangeable.
15
“EL/LA QUE” “EL/LA CUAL” Tu sobrina, la cual recibe buenas notas, quiere ser maestra. Estas langostas, las cuales (las que) son de Virginia, están muy frescas.
16
Nonrestrictive clause Contains information that is usually helpful to the overall meaning of the sentence; however is not essential. If you removed this clause, the sentence would stand on its own.
Presentaciones similares
© 2024 SlidePlayer.es Inc.
All rights reserved.