Are They in Spanish No Gender? | The Truth About “They”

Spanish uses gendered “ellos/ellas” plus “ustedes,” which doesn’t mark gender in the pronoun.

You’re not alone if “they” makes Spanish feel slippery. English lets one small word do a lot: a group, a single person, a person you don’t want to gender, a vague “they say…” voice, even a polite dodge when you’d rather not name who did what.

Spanish can express all those meanings, yet it doesn’t always do it with one pronoun. Person (who’s speaking to whom) matters, and agreement (how words match each other) shows up in more places than English speakers expect.

This article walks you through what Spanish marks, what it doesn’t, and how to write smooth Spanish when English would lean on “they.” You’ll also get reusable sentence patterns, plus two quick tables that make the choices easy to spot at a glance.

Spanish Word For They And Gender Marking In Real Use

When people ask about “they” in Spanish, they’re usually talking about the third-person plural subject: “they live here,” “they called,” “they’re hungry.” Spanish has two standard subject pronouns for that role: ellos (masculine plural) and ellas (feminine plural).

So yes, Spanish “they” can carry gender in the pronoun itself. The Real Academia Española summarizes this gender contrast in its grammar overview of pronouns, including ellos/ellas. See the RAE’s page on gender values of personal pronouns.

There’s also ustedes, which many learners bump into early. Ustedes is not “they.” It means “you (plural).” Still, it often comes up in this topic because it doesn’t show gender in the pronoun. If your English sentence is aimed at the people you’re speaking to (“You all are ready”), ustedes is the natural Spanish choice.

One twist: ustedes takes third-person plural verb forms in standard usage, so you get ustedes hablan (“you all speak”), not a special second-person plural ending in many regions. The RAE’s entry on usted explains how usted/ustedes behave as forms of address with third-person grammar.

When Spanish Pronouns Show Gender And When They Don’t

Spanish gender is mostly an agreement system. It’s about how words line up with each other, not a label glued to every human. Some pronouns show gender, some don’t, and Spanish often leaves subject pronouns out completely.

Gender shows up clearly in pairs like ellos/ellas, nosotros/nosotras, and vosotros/vosotras. Gender can also show up through adjectives and participles used like adjectives: cansados vs. cansadas, preparados vs. preparadas. In many sentences, that agreement carries more information than the pronoun.

On the other side, lots of common pronoun forms don’t change for gender: me, te, nos, os, se, and many possessives like mi and su. That’s why a learner can read a paragraph with zero gendered pronouns and still understand who’s doing what.

That leads to a frequent misunderstanding: “Spanish ‘they’ has no gender.” What people often mean is one of these:

  • They’re thinking of ustedes, which doesn’t mark gender in the pronoun.
  • They’ve noticed Spanish drops subject pronouns, so ellos or ellas never appears.
  • They’ve seen inclusive proposals like elle/elles and assume they’re standard.

Next, let’s lock down the standard “they” forms first, then we’ll cover clean ways to stay neutral without forcing awkward phrasing.

How To Say “They” For A Group In Spanish

If you mean “they” as “those people,” Spanish points you to ellos or ellas when you state the subject. The usual pattern is simple:

  • Ellos + third-person plural verb
  • Ellas + third-person plural verb

In traditional grammar, ellos is used for a group of men and for a mixed group. That can feel odd if you’re used to English “they” doing neutral work. Spanish speakers often avoid the issue by skipping the subject pronoun when the context is clear:

  • Llegaron temprano. (They arrived early.)
  • Quieren café. (They want coffee.)

When do you actually say ellos or ellas? Common moments are contrast, emphasis, and subject switches:

  • Ellas quieren salir, y ellos prefieren quedarse.
  • Ellos ya lo saben; nosotros no.

Notice how Spanish gives you more than one place where gender can show up. Even with no pronoun, agreement can still appear on adjectives or participles: Están listos vs. Están listas.

Regional Note On “Ustedes” And “Vosotros”

If you learned Spanish in Spain, you may have learned vosotros for “you all” in casual speech. In much of Latin America, ustedes covers nearly all plural “you” situations. In parts of Spain, ustedes is used for formal plural “you,” while vosotros stays common in informal contexts.

This is one reason learners mix up “they” and “you all.” In English, “you” doesn’t change, so your brain tries to map “they” to whatever plural pronoun you see most. In Spanish, you’ll get better results if you decide the person first: am I talking about them, or to them?

Which “They” Form Fits Your Sentence

What You Mean In English Common Spanish Choice Where Gender Can Show Up
They (men or mixed group) as subject ellos or no subject pronoun ellos is masculine; adjectives/participles may also show agreement
They (women) as subject ellas or no subject pronoun ellas is feminine; adjectives/participles may also show agreement
They = you all (people you’re addressing) ustedes (+ 3rd-plural verb) Pronoun doesn’t mark gender; agreement may appear elsewhere
They say… (impersonal “people say” voice) se dice… / dicen… No subject pronoun; sentence structure carries the meaning
They (unknown callers, unnamed actors) me dijeron… / llamaron… No pronoun needed; gender often stays off the page
They (objects or things) in plural Noun + verb (often no pronoun) Gender follows the noun via articles/adjectives
Singular “they” for one person Rewrite; repeat the noun; drop pronoun Gender can be avoided, or shown if you choose agreement
They = formal you (singular) in some English contexts usted (not “they”) Pronoun doesn’t mark gender; adjectives can

How Spanish Handles English Singular “They”

English singular “they” is popular because it’s flexible and low-drama. Spanish does the same work through different tools. You’ll usually pick one of these moves:

Use The Name Or The Role Again

Repeating the noun is normal in Spanish, even if it feels repetitive in English. It often reads cleaner than forcing a pronoun where Spanish doesn’t want one.

  • Alex dijo que Alex llega a las ocho.
  • La persona que llamó quiere hablar contigo.

You can also use a role noun: la persona, el cliente, la visita, quien llamó. Your choice controls whether gender appears through articles and adjectives.

Drop The Subject And Let The Verb Carry It

Spanish verb endings carry a lot of information, so many sentences don’t need a subject pronoun at all:

  • Dijeron que vienen mañana. (They said they’re coming tomorrow.)
  • Me dijeron que vienen mañana. (They told me they’re coming tomorrow.)

If the “they” in English is vague (“they say,” “they’re hiring,” “they don’t allow that”), Spanish often uses an impersonal structure. One common option is se:

  • Se dice que va a llover. (People say it’s going to rain.)
  • Se recomienda reservar. (It’s recommended to book ahead.)
  • Aquí se trabaja mucho. (People work a lot here.)

Choose Gendered Agreement When You Know The Person’s Preference

If you know the person uses “he” or “she” in English, Spanish agreement is straightforward. Use él or ella (singular) and match adjectives when they appear. When you want to avoid gendered agreement, rewrites tend to sound more natural than trying to invent a one-to-one pronoun match.

About “Elle/Elles” And Other Inclusive Proposals

You may have seen elle (singular) or elles (plural) used to avoid él/ella and ellos/ellas. These forms appear in some groups and informal writing. They are not part of standard academic grammar, and many institutions avoid them in formal text.

FundéuRAE has a detailed explanation of inclusive proposals and why people react strongly to them. Here’s the direct page: FundéuRAE on “ellas, ellos y elles”.

If you’re writing for school, work, or publication, check the house style. Some prefer neutral rewrites (dropping pronouns, using collective nouns, choosing impersonal phrasing) because those options work across audiences without changing the pronoun system.

Common Mix-Ups English Speakers Make

Mixing Up “They” With “You All”

English keeps “you” for both singular and plural. Spanish doesn’t. If the sentence is aimed at the people you’re speaking to, Spanish wants second person: ustedes (or vosotros in some regions). If the sentence is about other people, Spanish wants third person: ellos or ellas.

A fast check: if you can swap English “they” for “those people,” you’re in ellos/ellas territory. If you can swap it for “you all,” you’re in ustedes territory.

Overusing Subject Pronouns

Many beginner sentences feel stiff because English demands “they” in every clause. Spanish often sounds smoother without it. Try these side-by-side patterns:

  • Ellos viven aquí.Viven aquí.
  • Ellas quieren café.Quieren café.
  • Ellos ya llegaron.Ya llegaron.

Keep ellos and ellas for contrast, emphasis, or clarity when the subject could be misunderstood.

Assuming “Ellos” Always Means “Men”

Ellos can mean “men,” and it can also refer to mixed groups in traditional grammar. Context decides which sense people hear. If you want to avoid the default-masculine feel, you can often rewrite with a group noun: el equipo, la gente, el personal, la clase. That keeps the sentence flowing and reduces pronoun pressure.

Reusable Sentence Patterns For Daily Spanish

These templates cover most day-to-day needs. Swap the verb and the noun, keep the structure.

Talking About A Group (Third Person)

  • Ellos/Ellas + verbo: Ellas estudian aquí.
  • Verbo (no pronoun): Estudian aquí.
  • El equipo/La gente/El personal + verbo: El equipo llegó temprano.

Talking To A Group (Second Person)

  • Ustedes + 3rd-plural verbo: Ustedes tienen razón.
  • Question without pronoun: ¿Quieren sentarse?

Keeping Gender Out Of The Sentence

  • Drop the subject pronoun: Llegaron.
  • Use a collective noun: La gente llegó.
  • Use an impersonal pattern: Se permite estacionar aquí.

If you want a clear definition of what Spanish counts as a personal pronoun, the RAE’s Glosario entry on “pronombre personal” is a clean starting point. For a wider look at the forms and how they behave in sentences, the RAE also has a chapter on personal pronouns in El buen uso del español.

A Practical Way To Choose The Right Form

Your Goal Spanish Move One-Line Check
Talk about a known group ellos/ellas or no subject pronoun If you can point at them, third person fits
Talk to a group ustedes (or vosotros in some regions) If you can say “you all,” use second person
Keep the sentence neutral Drop pronoun; use collective noun; use se If no one needs the pronoun, skip it
Translate singular “they” in formal text Repeat the noun or use la persona If the pronoun sounds forced, rephrase
Respect a person’s chosen form Match agreement to what they use If you know their preference, follow it
Avoid default-masculine feel with mixed groups Use a group noun (el equipo, la gente) If you can name the group, do that

So, Is There A “No-Gender” Spanish “They”?

If you mean “a plural pronoun that doesn’t show gender,” Spanish has ustedes, used widely for “you all.” The pronoun itself doesn’t mark gender. If you mean “a standard pronoun that matches English singular ‘they’,” Spanish usually handles that meaning through rewrites: dropping the subject, repeating the noun, using se, or choosing a gendered form when it matches the person’s preference.

The trick is to stop forcing English “they” into one Spanish slot. Decide person first (about them vs. to them). Then ask a second question: does gender need to appear in this sentence at all? Plenty of clean Spanish sentences carry the meaning with no gendered pronoun on the page.

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