I pronomi relativi , Los pronombres relativos ( intermedio / avanzado)

Relative pronouns in Spanish (intermediate/advanced) The following are relative pronouns in Spanish: Que: che, cui. Refers to things or people. The teacher who teaches English is very serious. The movie I saw yesterday was very boring. El cual, la cua, l los cuales, las cuales: il quale, la quale, i quali, le quali. Refers to people or things. (especially in formal contexts) This is the person I told you about last week. These are the folders in which I keep the household papers. Quien/Quienes: chi (singular and plural). Refers to people. These are the girls with whom I go to the German course. The woman with whom Jaime studies is my aunt Lola. Whose, whose, whose, whose: di cui, della quale, del quale, dei quali, delle quali. Referring to a person or thing, with the value of a possessive. The boys whose parents are already here can leave. Pedro has a friend whose father is a famous singer. Relative pronouns are used to refer to something, such as a noun, a pronoun, an adjective, an adverb, or an entire phrase, cited beforehand (antecedent), without having to mention it again. Relative pronouns consequently form a relationship between two phrases, a main clause and a subordinate clause. Let's look at an example: I have read a book. This book is very interesting. = I have read a book that is very interesting. Yesterday I saw Maria. Maria told me something about Juan. = Yesterday I saw Maria, who told me something about Juan. The relative pronome is not compatible with the article, unless, first, it is not a preposition. The girl I share a flat with is super cool! The reason why you did it is very debatable. When the antecedent is an interphrase, a situation or an idea, we always use LO (neutral article) WHAT + VERB Have you noticed? What you have done is incredible! Is your attention ready? What he has done is incredible! What you say doesn't make sense. Ciò che said did not make sense. Remember to ometto il sostantivo a cui si riferisce il relative, in Spanish NON use il demostrativo ma l’articolo correspondente! The camicia che porti mi piace più di QUELLA CHE portavi ieri. I like the shirt you're wearing better than the one you were wearing yesterday. That book is good, but the one I read last month was more entertaining.