Questions & Answers about Este bosque es muy pacífico.
Spanish has three main “this/that” words that show distance:
- este = this, near the speaker
- ese = that, a bit farther from the speaker
- aquel = that (over there), far from both speaker and listener
In Este bosque es muy pacífico, este is used because the forest is understood as close to the speaker (physically, or in focus in the conversation).
If the forest were farther away, you might hear:
- Ese bosque es muy pacífico. – That forest is very peaceful.
- Aquel bosque es muy pacífico. – That forest (way over there) is very peaceful.
All three agree in gender and number with bosque (masculine, singular): este bosque, ese bosque, aquel bosque.
Spanish noun gender is partly predictable, but many nouns ending in -e can be either masculine or feminine, and you usually have to memorize them.
- el bosque – masculine (the forest)
- other masculine -e nouns: el parque (park), el puente (bridge)
- some feminine -e nouns: la calle (street), la noche (night)
Because bosque is masculine, you need masculine forms:
Ser (es) and estar (está) both mean “to be,” but they’re used differently.
- ser is used for more permanent characteristics or inherent qualities
- estar is used for temporary states, conditions, or locations
In Este bosque es muy pacífico, peace is being presented as a general, defining characteristic of the forest, so ser is used.
If you used estar, it would sound more like a temporary situation:
- Este bosque está muy pacífico hoy. – This forest is very peaceful today. (right now; maybe it’s not always this way)
Muy and mucho both relate to “a lot/very,” but they’re used differently:
muy goes before adjectives and adverbs
- muy pacífico – very peaceful
- muy grande – very big
- muy lentamente – very slowly
mucho goes with nouns and sometimes verbs
- mucho ruido – a lot of noise
- muchos bosques – many forests
- Llueve mucho. – It rains a lot.
Since pacífico is an adjective, you need muy pacífico, not mucho pacífico.
Adjectives in Spanish must agree in gender and number with the noun they describe.
So you get:
- Este bosque es muy pacífico. – masculine singular
- Esta selva es muy pacífica. – feminine singular (selva, “jungle,” is feminine)
For plural:
- Estos bosques son muy pacíficos. – masculine plural
- Estas selvas son muy pacíficas. – feminine plural
The accent mark (´) in pacífico shows where the stress goes.
Without thinking about rules, you might guess pa-CI-fi-co or PA-ci-fi-co. Spanish spelling rules say:
- Words ending in vowel, -n, or -s are normally stressed on the second-to-last syllable.
- pacífico ends in a vowel (o), so by default you’d stress FI: pa-CI-fi-co.
That’s actually correct, but because of the extra syllable pattern, Spanish writes the accent on í to make the stress clear: pa-CI-fi-co.
So you pronounce it: pa-CI-fi-co (stress on “cí”), not PA-ci-fi-co or pa-ci-FI-co.
Yes, but the meaning shifts slightly:
Este bosque es muy pacífico.
– This forest is very peaceful. (a specific forest near me or in focus)El bosque es muy pacífico.
– The forest is very peaceful. (either a specific one already known, or forests in general, depending on context)
Este points to a specific forest (“this one”), while el just says “the forest” without that demonstrative idea of “this/that”.
Historically, este/ese/aquel had accented versions (éste, ése, aquél) when used as pronouns (“this one,” “that one”) rather than adjectives.
- Este bosque es muy pacífico. – adjective (modifies bosque), no accent
- Éste es muy pacífico. – pronoun (“this one is very peaceful”), older style with accent
Modern recommendation of the Spanish Royal Academy (RAE):
- Don’t use the accent anymore unless it’s absolutely needed to avoid ambiguity.
- So you’ll mostly see este, ese, aquel without accents now.
In your sentence, este is clearly an adjective before a noun (bosque), so it never takes an accent.