"Ellos" is a Spanish pronoun that means "they" and is considered neutral in terms of formality. It can be used in both formal and informal contexts, depending on the situation and the accompanying language. The level of formality typically comes from the overall tone and context of the conversation rather than the pronoun itself.
Which one?Tiene (usted, él, ella) = you (singular formal)have//he/she hasTienen (ustedes, ellos, ellas) = you (plural formal)/they haveTienes = you (singular informal) haveTenéis = you (plural informal) have
There are six subject pronouns in the Spanish language: yo (I), tú (you), él/ella/usted (he/she/you formal), nosotros/nosotras (we), vosotros/vosotras (you all, informal), and ellos/ellas/ustedes (they/you all formal).
The seven Spanish subject Pronouns are: 'Yo', meaning 'I'. 'TÌ_', a singular, familiar form of 'You'. 'Usted', a singular, formal form of 'You'. 'Ìäl' or 'ella', meaning 'he' or 'she'. 'Nostros' or 'nostras, the forms of 'we'. 'Vostros' or 'vostras', the familiar, plural forms of 'you'. 'Ustedes', the formal form of the plural 'you'. 'Ellos, or 'Ellas', the two forms of 'they'.
it is an informal group
Yo estoy (I am)Tú estás (You are)Él/ella/eso//usted está (He/She/it is//you (formal singular) are)Nosotros estamos (We are)Vosotros estais (You are) (informal plural) (accent on the 'a')Ustedes están (You are) (formal plural)Ellos están (They are)
formal is the cinema and informal is a gay man
It's both formal and informal. It depends on how you say it. If you say "Adiós, señora." it's formal. If you say "Adiós, amigo." it's informal.
informal
formal and informal rhythm
what is formal and informal communication
tomar (infinitive)Conjugation in Present TenseSingularyo tomo (I take)tú Tomas (you take/informal)él/ella toma (he/she takes)usted toma (you take/formal)Pluralnosotros tomamos (we take)vosotros tomáis (you take/informal)ellos/ellas toman (they take)ustedes toman (you take/formal)
formal