They include this, these, that, and those. For example: These are nice shoes, but the heels are too high. These is the subject of the sentence, representing shoes. The speaker or writer may be currently wearing the shoes as they are narrating. The previous sentence example shows how important context is when using a demonstrative pronoun in Using these data, the trackers claim to offer valuable sleep insights, such as estimates of nightly deep sleep or a total "sleep score" that reflects overall sleep quality. (More than one boy.) We can use 'this / that / these / those' before a noun, or by themselves. Here are some examples without nouns. I'd like this, please. That is beautiful! Could I try these on? She wants those. When we use 'this / that / these / those' by themselves, they usually only talk about things, not people. This child is hungry. For example, there's been a dip in how much time investors spend on the "product" and "business model" slides and a significant increase in how long they're spending on the This, that, these, those. We can use this and these to talk about things near us. We can use that and those to talk about things far away. This book is my favourite. That is my sister in the garden. These are my two best friends. Those pens don't work. How to use them. Use this and these to talk about things near us. Use this for one thing and LUtx.