A Relative Pronoun heads an adjective clause.
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A clause is a statement or a question that generally consists of a subject and a verb phrase and constitutes a complete thought. Sentences can consist of a single clause, but they often include two: a main, or independent, clause and a subordinate, or dependent, clause.
Study this PPT
Exercises on "Relative clauses"
Exercise 8:
Exercise 9:
Exercise 10:
Exercise 11:
Exercise 12
Quiz 7: study for your exams
Extra Information
Relative
clauses (first type)
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e.g.
v He’s
the guy who got me started running
v She
had a company that planned
weddings.
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v Identifies
or gives information about a noun.
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Relative clauses (second type)
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v He
lives down the street, which is very convenient.
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v Refers
to a whole sentence.
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Restrictive Relative clauses(defining)
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v Ann
is the woman that sits across from me at work.
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v Identify
which person or thing is being talked about.
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Non-Restrictive Relative clauses(Non-defining)
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v Ann,
who sits across from me at work, used to have her own company.
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v They
are not used to identify something but just to give extra information about
the person or thing being talked about.
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Note: We are going to pay attention on defining relative
clauses.
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Adjective VS. Modifying clause (Relative Clause)
An Adjective is placed before the noun it modifies
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A modifying clause is placed after the noun it modifies. Either that or which is used with an inanimate noun. That is used informally with a personal noun.
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SUBJECT
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VERB
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MODIFIER
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NOUN
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SUBJECT
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VERB
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NOUN
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SUBJECT
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Sam
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sells
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new
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motorbikes
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Sam
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sells
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Motorbikes
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that/which are new.
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He
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collects
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old
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cars
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He
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collects
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Cars
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that/which are antique.
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He
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prefers
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economical
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vehicles
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He
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prefers
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vehicles
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that/which are hybrid.
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RELATIVE PRONOUN
USE
EXAMPLE
who
subject or object pronoun for people
I told you about the woman who lives next door.
which
subject or object pronoun for animals and things
Do you see the cat which is lying on the roof?
RELATIVE PRONOUN
USE
EXAMPLE
who
subject or object pronoun for people
I told you about the woman who lives next door.
which
subject or object pronoun for animals and things
Do you see the cat which is lying on the roof?
That /Which
THAT AS THE SUBJECT
THAT AS THE OBJECT
That or which replaces the repeated noun in the modifying clause. The that-clause is placed directly after the noun it modifies. (A modifying clause removes unnecessary words.)
Examples:
The car is economical to drive. The car is small. (noun)
The car is economical to drive. It is small. (pronoun)
That or which replaces the repeated noun in the modifying clause. That is placed at the beginning of the modifying clause and placed directly after the noun it modifies.
Examples:
The car is economical to drive. I want to buy the car.
The car is economical to drive. I want to buy it.
Subject of Mod CLS
Object of Mod CLS
The car
the car is small
that/which
is more economical to drive
The car
I bought the car
that/which
Is more economical to drive.
The car
that/which is small
is more economical to drive.
The car
(that/which) I bought
Is more economical to drive.
THAT AS THE SUBJECT
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THAT AS THE OBJECT
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That or which replaces the repeated noun in the modifying clause. The that-clause is placed directly after the noun it modifies. (A modifying clause removes unnecessary words.)
Examples:
The car is economical to drive. The car is small. (noun)
The car is economical to drive. It is small. (pronoun)
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That or which replaces the repeated noun in the modifying clause. That is placed at the beginning of the modifying clause and placed directly after the noun it modifies.
Examples:
The car is economical to drive. I want to buy the car.
The car is economical to drive. I want to buy it.
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Subject of Mod CLS
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Object of Mod CLS
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The car
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that/which
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is more economical to drive
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The car
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I bought
that/which
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Is more economical to drive.
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The car
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that/which is small
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is more economical to drive.
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The car
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(that/which) I bought
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Is more economical to drive.
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Relative pronouns
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v Many
relative clauses start with a relative pronoun, but not all relative clauses
need a relative pronoun.
Ø Who and that are used to
refer to people.
Ø Which and that are used to
refer to things.
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Subject relative clauses
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v Ann
is an interesting woman who sits across from me. (who refers back to woman,
and it is
the subject of the verb sits.)
v Ann
had a company that planned weddings. (that refers back to company , and it is the
subject of planned.)
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v In
the subject relative clauses, the relative pronoun is the subject of the verb
in the clause.
v In
SRCs , who is more common than that to refer to people, and that is more
common that which for things.
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Object relative clauses
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v Charlie
is someone (who/that)
I can trust. (the use of
who/that is optional; they are the object
of the verb trust. I is the subject of the
verb trust.
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v My
mother talks about the tings (that) she
is doing. (The RP that is optional; it refers back
to
things, and it is the object of the
verb doing. She is the subject of
the RC.
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Note: Whom is considered by some people to be the correct
relative pronoun in OR clauses about people (e.g., Charlie is someone whom I
can trust.). However, in conversation, whom is becoming less common (who
I used instead). Whom is mostly used after a preposition in the corpus, over
70 percent of the occurrences of whom are after a preposition.
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Subject Pronoun or Object Pronoun?
Subject and object pronouns cannot be distinguished by their forms - who, which, that are used for subject and object pronouns. You can, however, distinguish them as follows:
If the relative pronoun is followed by a verb, the relative pronoun is a subject pronoun. Subject pronouns must always be used.
Sara is a good student. She sits across from me.
Sara is a good student who sits across from me.
subject pronous
Now, join into a sentences these two sentences:
She has never met the lecturer. The lecture is leading today’s seminar.
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You can say:
They caught the man who / that spied for China.( who / that refer to people)
I lost the map which / that she gave me.( which / that refer to objects)
She complained to the man whose dog bit her. (Whose refers to possession )
Choose the correct relative pronoun (who, which, whose)
1. This is the bank ______ was robbed the day before yesterday.
2. The man _______ robbed the bank had a big pistol.
3. He wore a mask _______ made him look like Mickey Mouse.
4. The woman _______ gave him the money was an old lady.
Relative pronouns used as the object of defining Relative clauses
Example:
That is the boy. I invited him to the party.
You can say : That’s the boy (Ø, that, who, whom) I invited to the party.
Now, join into a sentence these two sentences:
That is the house. I’d like to buy the house. (Ø, that, which)
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