Cleft Sentences - : Copulativas de Relativo
Cleft Sentences - : Copulativas de Relativo
Cleft Sentences - : Copulativas de Relativo
Known as cleft sentences in English, copulativas enfáticas ( or oraciones hendidas) is the term used
to describe constructions in which the word order of a sentence is changed to emphasize certain elements,
using the verb ser to link a relative pronoun/adverb (relativo sin antecedente expreso, e.g. lo que,
donde, etc.) with afocal segment.1-2
1) Example
Normal construction
-A ese autor le falta imaginación — That author lacks imagination
In the following sentences we assume the listener is already aware that the author lackssomething;
the speaker may be correcting or clarifying what exactly it is that he lacks.
-Lo que le falta a ese autor es imaginación — What that author lacks is imagination
-Imaginación es lo que le falta — Imagination is what he lacks
-Es imaginación lo que le falta — It's imagination he lacks
In the following sentences we know someone lacks imagination; the speaker is focusing onwho it is
that lacks it.
-A ese autor es al que le falta imaginación — It's that author/that's the author who lacks imagination
-Es a ese autor al que le falta imaginación
2. Example
Normal construction
-Mi abuela murió en esa casa — My gran died in that house
Focus on where the grandmother died. The listener/reader may already know that the person's
grandmother died.
-Donde murió mi abuela es (fue*) en esa casa — Where my gran died is in that house (*tense can
alternate -read more)
-En esa casa es donde murió mi abuela — That house is where my gran died
-Es en esa casa donde murió mi abuela — It's in that house where my gran died
Focus on who died in that house. The listener/reader is probably already aware that someone died
there.
-Mi abuela fue quien murió en esa casa — My gran is the one who died in that house
-Fue mi abuela quien murió en esa casa — It was my gran who died in that house
Verb Agreement
As mentioned previously, when referring to people, for first- and second-person singular subjects the verb
should agree with the relative pronoun/adverb, i.e. conjugated in third-person singular.
However, in conversational Spanish it is not uncommon to hear sentences like 'fuí yo el que llamé',
especially when the subject goes at the end: 'el que llamé fuí yo'.3
Yo lo dije — I said it
Fui yo quien lo dijo — It was me who said it / I was the one who said it
Quien lo dijo (dije) fui yo
In first- and second-person plural, meanwhile, the verb should agree with the subject; however, in the
presence of the possessive adjective su, both options may be possible.4
Fuimos nosotros los que hicimos el trabajo — We were the ones who did the work
Sois vosotros los que me habéis llamado — You're the ones who called me
Los que llevan/llevamos a sus hijos al colegio todos los días somos nosotros — We're the ones who
take our children to school every day
Prepositions
If the first half of a Spanish cleft sentence contains a preposition, the preposition must normally be
repeated in the second half: in Spanish, one says 'it's with her with whom you must speak' —
es con ella con quien tienes que hablar.5
Quería hablar con su jefe — He wanted to speak with his boss
→Era con su jefe con quien/el que quería hablar — It was his boss he wanted to speak with (it was with
his boss with whom...)
Veo la casa desde aquí — I can see the house from here
→Desde aquí es desde donde veo la casa — Here is where I can see the house from
Consiguió callarlos con una amenaza — He managed to shut them up with a threat
→Fue con una amenaza con lo que consiguió callarlos — A threat was what he managed to shut them
up with
Estan de acuerdo en eso — They agree on that
→En eso es en lo único en lo que están de acuerdo — That's the only thing they agree on
Future
When referring to the future, the main verb of the cleft sentence can usually alternate between future and
present subjunctive. When the focal element is at the head of the sentence the subjunctive is the most
common option.
"Cuando se describe una situación futura, la relativa contagia el futuro a la copulativa, y esta, a su vez,
puede inducir el subjuntivo en la subordinada".1
Serás tú la que tenga (tendrá) que limpiarlo — You'll be the one who has to clean it
Él será quien lo haga (hará) — He'll be the one to do it
Eso será lo que haga (hará) — That's what he'll do
When the relative pronoun/adverb is at the head of the sentence, however, the main verb normally goes
in the future tense.
Donde haremos la fiesta será aquí — Where we'll have the party is here
Quien tendrá que limpiarlo seré yo — The person who has to clean it will be me
Lo que hará será precisamente eso — What he'll do is precisely that
Conditionals
Another type of cleft sentence, discussed previously, is the 'copulativa enfática condicional'. Here the focal
element is usually linked by the verb ser to one of the indefinite pronouns algo, alguien, and alguno.
Si comía algo era chocolate — If there was one thing he ate, it was chocolate
Si alguien sabe de estas cosas, es Juan — If anyone knows about these things, it's Juan