In the above examples todoappears before the item it modifies. However,
it can be moved to other positions in the sentence, still agreeing with the
associated noun:
Los alumnos son todos muy simpáticos.
The students are all very nice.
La habitación estaba toda pintada de azul.
The whole room was painted blue.
Used with nouns referring to periods of time, todos/as + definite article
translates English ‘every’:
todos los meses every monthtodas las semanas every weekTodo + neuter article or demonstrative
Todocan be used as in 9.9.1.1 but with the neuter article or a neuter
demonstrative:
todo lo demás everything elsetodo esto/eso/aquello all this/thatTodo + relative pronounTodos los que/todas las que‘all (those)/everyone who’ and the neuter todo
lo que‘all/everything that’ are common relative constructions. Los/lasand
locannot be omitted:Entrevistamos a todos los que asistieron.
We interviewed all those who attended.
Nos mostraron todo lo que habían encontrado.
They showed us everything that they had found.
Notes:
1 For the use of cuantoas an alternative to the above, see 25.8.
2 Todos los queis also occasionally replaced by todo el quewith a singular verb:
Todo el que pasó la saludó‘Everyone who passed waved to her’.Todo + indefinite articleThis pattern is possible but it tends to have an emphatic rather than a literal
meaning. Thus it usually means ‘a real’ rather than ‘a whole’:9.9.1.49.9.1.39.9.1.21111
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1011
1
12111
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
20111
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
30111
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
40
41111
9
Indefinite
adjectives,
pronouns and
adverbs