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.
How to Form Relative Clauses
Imagine,
a girl is talking to Jacob. You want to know who she is and ask a friend
whether he knows her. You could say:
A girl is talking to Jacob.
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 Jacob. 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 Jacob?
Relative
Pronouns
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?
|
which
|
referring
to a whole sentence
|
He
couldn’t read which surprised me.
|
whose
|
possession
for people animals and things
|
Do you
know the boy whose mother is a nurse?
|
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.
|
that
|
subject
or object pronoun for people, animals and things in defining relative clauses
(who or which are also possible)
|
I don’t
like the table that stands in the kitchen.
|
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.
the apple which is lying on the table
If the
relative pronoun is not followed by a verb (but by a noun or pronoun), the
relative pronoun is an object pronoun. Object pronouns can be
dropped in defining relative clauses, which are then called Contact
Clauses.
the apple (which) George lay on the table
Relative Adverbs
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.
relative adverb
|
meaning
|
use
|
example
|
when
|
in/on which
|
refers
to a time expression
|
the day when we
met him
|
where
|
in/at which
|
refers to a place
|
the
place where we met him
|
why
|
for which
|
refers to a reason
|
the
reason why we met him
|
Defining Relative Clauses
Defining
relative clauses (also called identifying relative clauses or restrictive
relative clauses) give detailed information defining a general term or
expression. Defining relative clauses are not put in commas.
Imagine,
Jacob is in a room with five girls. One girl is talking to Jacob and you ask
somebody whether he knows this girl. Here the relative clause defines which of
the five girls you mean.
Do you know the girl who is talking to Jacob?
A
seaman is someone who works on a ship.
Object
pronouns in defining relative clauses can be dropped. (Sentences with a
relative clause without the relative pronoun are calledContact Clauses.)
The boy (who/whom) we
met yesterday is very nice.
Non-Defining Relative Clauses
Non-defining
relative clauses (also called non-identifying relative clauses or non-restrictive
relative clauses) give additional information on something, but do not
define it. Non-defining relative clauses are put in commas.
Imagine,
Jacob is in a room with only one girl. The two are talking to each other and
you ask somebody whether he knows this girl. Here the relative clause is
non-defining because in this situation it is obvious which girl you mean.
Do you know the girl, who
is talking to Jacob?
Note: In
non-defining relative clauses, who/which may not be replaced
with that.
Object
pronouns in non-defining relative clauses must be used.
Jim, who/whom we met
yesterday, is very nice.
How to Shorten Relative Clauses?
Relative
clauses with who, which, that as
subject pronoun can be replaced with a participle. This
makes the sentence shorter and easier to understand.
I told you about the woman who
lives next door. – I told you about the woman living next door.
Do you see the cat which
is lying on the roof? – Do you see the cat lying on the roof?
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