We use relative
clauses to give additional information about something without starting another
sentence. By combining sentences with a relative clause, your text becomes more
fluent and you can avoid repeating certain words.
Imagine, a girl is
talking to Tom. You want to know who she is and ask a friend whether he knows
her. You could say:
A girl is
talking to Tom. Do you know the girl?
That sounds rather
complicated, doesn't it? It would be easier with a relative clause: you put
both pieces of information into one sentence. Start with the most important
thing – you want to know who the girl is.
Do you know
the girl …
As your friend
cannot know which girl you are talking about, you need to put in the additional
information – the girl is talking to Tom. Use „the girl“ only in the
first part of the sentence, in the second part replace it with the relative
pronoun (for people, use the relative pronoun „who“). So the final sentence is:
Do you know
the girl who is talking to Tom?
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relative pronoun
|
use
|
example
|
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who
|
subject or object pronoun for people
|
I told you about the woman who lives next door.
|
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which
|
subject or object pronoun for animals and things
|
Do you see the cat which is lying on the
roof?
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which
|
referring to a whole sentence
|
He couldn’t read which surprised me.
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whose
|
possession for people animals and things
|
Do you know the boy whose mother is a
nurse?
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whom
|
object pronoun for people, especially in non-defining relative clauses
(in defining relative clauses we colloquially prefer who)
|
I was invited by the professor whom I met at the
conference.
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that
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subject or object pronoun for people, animals and things in defining
relative clauses (who or which are also
possible)
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I don’t like the table that stands in the
kitchen.
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A relative adverb
can be used instead of a relative pronoun plus preposition. This often makes
the sentence easier to understand.
This is the
shop in which I bought my bike.
→ This is the shop where I bought my bike.
→ This is the shop where I bought my bike.
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relative adverb
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meaning
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use
|
example
|
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when
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in/on which
|
refers to a time expression
|
the day when we met him
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where
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in/at which
|
refers to a place
|
the place where we met him
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why
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for which
|
refers to a reason
|
the reason why we met him
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