The Gazette: ‘What are those?’ the story behind Spencer Jones’ start-up sneakers
1 "These" preambles the subject, "those" references a past subject and possibly a different one from these. These are the terms and conditions that those criteria ought to be met, or those terms and conditions will define the outcome if these are not met.
A simple question on when to use "these" and when "those" while writing
Instead of "answering the questions from those that walked by" we would probably say, "and answering any questions from passers-by" or "answering visitors' questions." You can say "those that", but it's less used (at least in books) than "those who". "Those that" and "They that" frequently occur in the King James Bible of 1611, but they might sound a little old-fashioned nowadays. By the way ...
Can I use "those that VERB …" instead of "those who VERB
The same is true of 'these' and 'those'. Generally, 'these' is for things brought to you, 'those' are things that are highlighted to you. Example: If your friend handed you some photographs, he might say " these are photos of my family". But, if he pointed at some photos hanging on the wall, he might say " those are photos of my family".
The question is about "those knowing" vs "those who know", not about the continuous/progressive as verb in a main clause.
those knowing VS those who know - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Yes, it is true — if, by "possessive form" you mean the possessive inflection of a noun ('s, etc.), and yes, you can use the possessive without using that of or those of. However, I don't believe you fully understand the two ways to indicate the possessive case. I'll explain them, and then explain how the demonstrative pronoun (this, that, these and those) fits in. The possessive case takes ...