B2

Relative Pronoun: cuyo

Pronombre Relativo: cuyo

Relative Pronoun: cuyo in Spanish

Overview

The relative pronoun cuyo (whose) is one of the most distinctive and elegant features of Spanish grammar. It expresses possession within a relative clause, connecting a noun to its owner: "the man whose house..." "the author whose book..." While it might seem like a small addition to your grammar toolkit, cuyo fills a gap that no other Spanish word can fill.

At the B2 level, cuyo is important primarily for reading comprehension and formal writing. It appears frequently in literature, journalism, academic texts, and legal language. In everyday conversation, native speakers tend to avoid cuyo and restructure sentences instead, but understanding and being able to use it marks you as a sophisticated speaker.

The unique challenge of cuyo is that it agrees in gender and number with the thing possessed, not with the possessor. This goes against the instinct of many learners and is the most common source of errors.

How It Works

Forms of Cuyo

Cuyo has four forms, agreeing with the noun that follows it (the possessed item):

Form Gender/Number Example
cuyo masculine singular El hombre cuyo coche es rojo.
cuya feminine singular La mujer cuya casa visité.
cuyos masculine plural El autor cuyos libros son famosos.
cuyas feminine plural La empresa cuyas acciones subieron.

Agreement Rule

Cuyo agrees with the possessed noun, NOT with the possessor.

Possessor Possessed Cuyo form Example
El hombre (masc.) casa (fem.) cuya El hombre cuya casa...
La mujer (fem.) hijo (masc.) cuyo La mujer cuyo hijo...
Los estudiantes (masc. pl.) notas (fem. pl.) cuyas Los estudiantes cuyas notas...
La autora (fem.) libro (masc.) cuyo La autora cuyo libro...

Position in the Sentence

Cuyo always comes between the possessor (antecedent) and the possessed noun:

Antecedent + cuyo/a/os/as + possessed noun + rest of clause

Structure Example Translation
person + cuyo + noun El profesor cuyo curso es difícil. The professor whose course is difficult.
thing + cuya + noun La casa cuya puerta es azul. The house whose door is blue.
person + cuyos + noun El autor cuyos libros he leído. The author whose books I've read.
thing + cuyas + noun La empresa cuyas oficinas están en Madrid. The company whose offices are in Madrid.

With Prepositions

Cuyo can follow prepositions:

Example Translation
La persona en cuya casa nos alojamos. The person in whose house we stayed.
El asunto sobre cuyo resultado no sé nada. The matter about whose result I know nothing.
La ciudad por cuyas calles caminamos. The city through whose streets we walked.

Examples in Context

Spanish English Note
El hombre cuya casa visité es arquitecto. The man whose house I visited is an architect. cuya (fem. sing. = casa)
La autora cuyo libro leí ganó un premio. The author whose book I read won a prize. cuyo (masc. sing. = libro)
Los estudiantes cuyos padres vinieron están contentos. The students whose parents came are happy. cuyos (masc. pl. = padres)
La empresa cuyas acciones subieron es tecnológica. The company whose shares rose is a tech company. cuyas (fem. pl. = acciones)
El país cuyo idioma estudio es España. The country whose language I study is Spain. cuyo (masc. sing. = idioma)
La mujer cuyo marido es médico trabaja aquí. The woman whose husband is a doctor works here. cuyo (masc. sing. = marido)
Es un problema cuya solución no es fácil. It's a problem whose solution isn't easy. cuya (fem. sing. = solución)
El museo, cuyas obras son famosas, abre mañana. The museum, whose works are famous, opens tomorrow. cuyas, non-restrictive clause
La familia en cuya casa nos quedamos fue muy amable. The family in whose house we stayed was very kind. With preposition en
El río cuyo nombre no recuerdo era muy ancho. The river whose name I don't remember was very wide. cuyo (masc. sing. = nombre)

Common Mistakes

Making cuyo agree with the possessor instead of the possessed

  • Wrong: La mujer cuya hijo es médico. (cuya because mujer is feminine)
  • Right: La mujer cuyo hijo es médico. (cuyo because hijo is masculine)
  • Why: This is the most common error. Cuyo must agree with the noun that comes after it (the thing possessed), not with the noun before it (the possessor).

Using de quien instead of cuyo

  • Wrong: El hombre de quien casa visité. (literally, "the man of whom house")
  • Right: El hombre cuya casa visité.
  • Why: De quien cannot directly modify a noun. While in casual speech people sometimes restructure to avoid cuyo (El hombre, al que le visité la casa), the correct relative possessive pronoun is cuyo.

Placing an article before the possessed noun

  • Wrong: El hombre cuyo el libro...
  • Right: El hombre cuyo libro...
  • Why: Cuyo already functions as a determiner (like an article or possessive adjective). Adding el/la/los/las before the noun it modifies is redundant and incorrect.

Using cuyo as an interrogative

  • Wrong: ¿Cuyo libro es este?
  • Right: ¿De quién es este libro?
  • Why: Cuyo is strictly a relative pronoun used to connect clauses. For questions meaning "whose?", Spanish uses ¿de quién?

Usage Notes

Cuyo belongs primarily to formal and written registers. In everyday spoken Spanish, native speakers frequently avoid it, restructuring sentences with alternative constructions:

Formal (cuyo) Informal alternative
El chico cuyo padre es médico. El chico que su padre es médico. (non-standard but very common)
La casa cuya puerta es roja. La casa que tiene la puerta roja.

The informal construction que su (e.g., El hombre que su casa es grande) is widespread in speech across all Spanish-speaking regions but is considered incorrect in standard grammar. Using cuyo correctly in your writing and formal speech demonstrates a high level of Spanish proficiency.

In journalism and academic writing, cuyo is alive and well. News articles regularly use it: El político, cuyas declaraciones causaron polémica... (The politician, whose statements caused controversy...).

There is no regional variation in how cuyo works -- the rules are the same everywhere. The difference is purely one of register: formal/written contexts use it; informal/spoken contexts avoid it.

Practice Tips

  • Remember the golden rule with a mnemonic: "Cuyo looks forward, not backward." It agrees with the word after it, not before it.
  • Practice by describing people and things around you: Mi vecino, cuyo perro ladra mucho... El restaurante, cuya comida es excelente... La profesora, cuyos exámenes son difíciles...
  • Read Spanish news articles and highlight every instance of cuyo. Note which form is used and confirm it agrees with the possessed noun. This builds recognition faster than production practice.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Relative Pronouns: donde, cualB1

More B2 concepts

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