Spanish Interrogative Adjectives and Pronouns  

Resources Spanish Grammar Spanish Interrogative
 

Interrogative pronouns are those pronouns which are typically used to ask questions. As in English, interrogative pronouns are usually placed at the beginning of a sentence. The lessons above present the Spanish interrogative pronouns along with examples of their use. Note that some pronouns exist in singular and plural forms as well as masculine and feminine forms.

Spanish interrogative pronouns can be difficult for Spanish language learners. A pronoun is a word that replaces a noun, and interrogative means questioning, so interrogative pronouns are pronouns used to ask the questions who, what, which, how much/many, and where. Quién, qué, cuál, cuánto, and dónde are Spanish interrogative pronouns. Please note that the Spanish interrogatives all have accent marks. This is important when writing because these words have different meanings without the accent marks.

If you can remember your grammar lessons from primary school, you may recall the “five Ws” (who, what, when, where, why). These are refereed to as "interrogative pronouns" because they are pronouns which are used when asking a question. I attempted to develop a mnemonic device for Spanish interrogative pronouns, but few students thought that QQCD was very hellful to them when learning Spanish interrogative pronouns.

It is important to note that questions which use the interrogatives require more then a "yes" or "no" answer - they are requesting information. The interrogative pronouns replace the noun that we’re asking about in a sentence. We use them in direct questions and in indirect questions, for example:

¿Cuál es la lengua oficial de su país?
¿Quién es esa chica?
¿Qué hace?
¿En qué piensa?

If you really want to speak Spanish, and not just waste time learning a little Spanish for school or for a hobbie, you should go through ever lesson of our Spanish for Beginners - Spanish 101 course. A thorough knowledge of Spanish will give you the upper leg when applying for professional career opportunities. Your ability to converse at ease in both Spanish and English will set you apart from the less motivated applicants who will seem extremely lazy in comparison to you. Successfully completing our conversational Spanish course, will clearly demonstrate to any future employer that you have self-discipline to achieve difficult goals without having a baby-sitter (teacher) to keep you motivated. Self-motivation is what every employer is looking for. I know, I have employed many people over the past 15 years and it is rare to find employees who do not need a baby-sitter (boss) to keep them motivated.







Popular Phrase: imperfect indicative | Spanish Word for Hello | Conjugated Verb: apalear - to beat, to batter [ click for full conjugation ]