(By Holger Diessel): "Demonstratives are commonly divided into pronominal demonstratives, which substitute for a noun (phrase), and adnominal demonstratives, which accompany a coreferential noun. In English, pronominal and adnominal demonstratives have the same forms: this and that may function as independent pronouns, as in (1a) [I don't like that], or they may cooccur with a noun, as in (1b) [this book]. In other languages, pronominal and adnominal demonstratives are often formally distinguished: they may have different stems or they may have different inflectional features. For instance, in French pronominal and adnominal demonstratives have different stems: celui and celle are used pronominally and ce and cette accompany a noun."