Subject Pronouns
Pronombres Sujeto
Subject Pronouns in Spanish
Overview
Subject pronouns are the very first building block you need when learning Spanish. They tell you who is performing the action in a sentence, just like "I," "you," "he," and "she" do in English. In Spanish, these pronouns are yo, tú, él/ella/usted, nosotros/nosotras, vosotros/vosotras, and ellos/ellas/ustedes.
At the CEFR A1 level, mastering subject pronouns is essential because every verb you conjugate depends on knowing which pronoun (or person) you are referring to. One key difference from English is that Spanish often drops the subject pronoun entirely, since the verb ending already tells the listener who is doing the action. You will hear "Hablo español" just as often as "Yo hablo español."
Another important feature of Spanish pronouns is the distinction between formal and informal address. While English uses "you" for everyone, Spanish has tú (informal) and usted (formal) for singular, and vosotros/as (informal, used mainly in Spain) and ustedes (formal, or general plural in Latin America) for plural.
How It Works
Spanish subject pronouns are organized by person and number. Here is the complete chart:
| Person | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | yo (I) | nosotros / nosotras (we) |
| 2nd informal | tú (you) | vosotros / vosotras (you all) |
| 2nd formal | usted (you) | ustedes (you all) |
| 3rd | él / ella (he / she) | ellos / ellas (they) |
Key rules
- Gender distinctions: Nosotros/nosotras, vosotros/vosotras, and ellos/ellas have masculine and feminine forms. Use the feminine form when the entire group is female; otherwise, the masculine form is used as the default.
- Usted and ustedes take third-person verb forms even though they mean "you." This is a common source of confusion for beginners.
- Pronoun dropping: Because Spanish verb endings indicate the subject, pronouns are often omitted. You include them for emphasis, contrast, or clarity ("Yo soy de Madrid, pero ella es de Barcelona").
- Regional variation: In most of Latin America, vosotros/as is not used at all. Ustedes serves as the only plural "you," whether formal or informal.
Examples in Context
| Spanish | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Yo soy español. | I am Spanish. | Pronoun included for emphasis |
| ¿Tú hablas inglés? | Do you speak English? | Informal "you" |
| ¿Usted es americano? | Are you American? (formal) | Formal "you," uses 3rd person verb |
| Ellos viven en Madrid. | They live in Madrid. | Masculine or mixed group |
| Nosotras somos amigas. | We are friends. (all female) | Feminine plural |
| Ella trabaja aquí. | She works here. | Third person singular |
| Ustedes son muy amables. | You all are very kind. | Formal or Latin American plural |
| Él es mi hermano. | He is my brother. | Basic identification |
| Vosotros tenéis razón. | You all are right. | Spain only, informal |
| ¿Quién eres tú? | Who are you? | Pronoun adds emphasis |
Common Mistakes
Using "tú" with formal verb forms
- Wrong: Tú es muy amable.
- Right: Tú eres muy amable.
- Why: Tú requires second-person verb endings (eres), not third-person (es). If you want to use es, the pronoun should be usted.
Forgetting that "usted" takes third-person verbs
- Wrong: Usted eres profesor.
- Right: Usted es profesor.
- Why: Even though usted means "you," it always takes third-person singular verb forms.
Using "vosotros" in Latin American contexts
- Wrong: Vosotros podéis venir. (in Latin America)
- Right: Ustedes pueden venir.
- Why: In Latin America, vosotros is not used. Use ustedes for all plural "you" situations.
Overusing subject pronouns
- Wrong: Yo quiero, yo necesito, yo pienso... (in every sentence)
- Right: Quiero, necesito, pienso...
- Why: Spanish verb endings already indicate the subject. Constantly including the pronoun sounds unnatural and overly emphatic.
Practice Tips
- Listen for dropped pronouns. When watching Spanish media, notice how often speakers omit yo, tú, etc. Train your ear to identify the subject from the verb form alone.
- Practice formal vs. informal. Role-play conversations where you address a friend (tú) and then a stranger or elder (usted). Pay attention to how the verb forms change.
- Create flashcards by person. Write sentences for each pronoun and practice conjugating the same verb across all six forms. This reinforces both pronouns and verb patterns.
Related Concepts
- Next steps: Ser (to be) - Present
- Next steps: Estar (to be) - Present
- Next steps: Tener (to have)
- Next steps: Regular -AR Verbs
- Next steps: Regular -ER Verbs
- Next steps: Regular -IR Verbs
- Next steps: Direct Object Pronouns
- Next steps: Indirect Object Pronouns
Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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