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🇪🇸B1

B1 Spanish GrammarRelative Clauses

Master Spanish relative clauses using que, quien, el cual, cuyo, and donde to add information about nouns. Learn when to use each relative pronoun and understand the difference between defining and non-defining clauses. Create sophisticated, flowing sentences.

1The Relative Pronoun 'que'

Que is the most common Spanish relative pronoun, meaning 'that', 'which', 'who', or 'whom'. It refers to both people and things. Que never changes form regardless of gender or number. It's used in both defining (essential) and non-defining (extra info) clauses.

Using 'que' for People and Things

AntecedentSpanishEnglish
PersonLa mujer que trabaja aquíThe woman who works here
ThingEl libro que compréThe book (that) I bought
PlaceLa casa que vimosThe house (that) we saw
IdeaTodo lo que dijisteEverything (that) you said

Examples

El hombre que llegó es mi tío.

The man who arrived is my uncle.

que for people as subject

La película que vimos fue excelente.

The movie (that) we saw was excellent.

que for things as object

Los estudiantes que estudian pasan.

The students who study pass.

defining clause - essential info

Mi madre, que es doctora, me ayudó.

My mother, who is a doctor, helped me.

non-defining with commas

2Quien and Quienes

Quien (singular) and quienes (plural) refer only to people, never things. They're required after prepositions (a quien, con quien, para quienes). They can replace que in non-defining clauses but sound more formal. In defining clauses, que is preferred.

Quien vs Que for People

ContextPreferredExample
After prepositionquienla persona con quien hablé
Defining clausequeel chico que conocí
Non-defining (formal)quienAna, quien vive aquí,...
Non-defining (common)queAna, que vive aquí,...

Examples

La mujer con quien trabajo es amable.

The woman with whom I work is kind.

quien required after preposition

Los amigos a quienes invité no vinieron.

The friends whom I invited didn't come.

quienes plural after 'a'

Mi hermano, quien vive en Madrid, vendrá.

My brother, who lives in Madrid, will come.

formal non-defining clause

Quien mucho abarca, poco aprieta.

He who grasps much, holds little.

quien without antecedent (proverb)

3El cual, La cual, Los cuales, Las cuales

El cual forms agree in gender and number with their antecedent. They're used after prepositions (especially compound ones like detrás de, encima de) and in formal writing. They help clarify which noun is being referenced when there's ambiguity.

Forms of 'el cual'

GenderSingularPlural
Masculineel cuallos cuales
Femininela cuallas cuales
Neuterlo cual-

lo cual refers to entire ideas, not specific nouns

Examples

La ventana detrás de la cual estaba el gato...

The window behind which the cat was...

after compound preposition

Llegó tarde, lo cual me molestó.

He arrived late, which annoyed me.

lo cual refers to whole situation

Los libros, los cuales compré ayer, son buenos.

The books, which I bought yesterday, are good.

formal non-defining clause

La razón por la cual vine es clara.

The reason for which I came is clear.

after 'por' in formal register

4Cuyo and Donde

Cuyo means 'whose' and agrees with the thing possessed, not the possessor (cuyo libro = whose book, cuya casa = whose house). Donde means 'where' and replaces 'en que' for places. Adonde is used with verbs of motion.

Cuyo Agreement

Possessed nounFormExample
masc. sing.cuyoel hombre cuyo coche...
fem. sing.cuyala mujer cuya hija...
masc. pluralcuyosel autor cuyos libros...
fem. pluralcuyasla casa cuyas ventanas...

Examples

El escritor cuyo libro leí es famoso.

The writer whose book I read is famous.

cuyo agrees with 'libro' (masc.)

La ciudad donde nací es pequeña.

The city where I was born is small.

donde for places

El país adonde viajamos era hermoso.

The country where we traveled was beautiful.

adonde with motion verb

La familia cuyas tradiciones respeto...

The family whose traditions I respect...

cuyas agrees with 'tradiciones' (fem. pl.)