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TOPIC: Metal Blah Blah Blah
[guidogodoy] Thursday, August 06, 2009 3:36:29 PM 
To answer the "ese" vs. "esa" question: yes and no.

The slang "ese" (used as a form of address almost like "dude" or "guy") only exists in the masculine form. HOWEVER, "esa" exists as does a formal version of "ese" - they are both demonstrative adjectives AND pronouns.

ese (no accent) is the masculine singular demonstrative adjective meaning "that" (ie. ese libro = that book)
ése (with accent) is a demonstrative pronoun meaning (that ONE). As in all pronouns, you have to have established a referent: (No me gusta ese libro, prefiero ése - I don't like that book, I prefer that ONE...the one being implicit having established the masculine singular noun "el libro" as your referent).

Same goes for feminine singular: esa mujer - that woman; ésa = that one.

The plurals work the same but watch the form. Masculine plural of "ese" is "esos"; "ése" is "ésos" <==common error among illiterates to say "eses." Feminine plurals are normal: "esa" goes to "esas"'; the pronouns "ésa" goes to "ésas."

Hope this helps clarify, ¡güero!
  [Show/Hide Quoted Message] (Quoting Message by Deep Freeze from Thursday, August 06, 2009 8:33:32 AM)
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