25/2/2016 Relative Clauses Intermediate By Viv Quarry www.vivquarry.com Defining Relative Clauses It's considered bad writing style to use very short sentences: I met the man.. In th
Trang 125/2/2016 Relative Clauses (Intermediate )
By Viv Quarry (www.vivquarry.com)
Defining Relative Clauses
It's considered bad writing style to use very short sentences:
I met the man. He works in the bank
I bought the coat. It was in the shop window
I met the man. Susan loves him
I bought the coat. Susan wanted it
In the first two sentences, the man and the coat are the SUBJECT of the second sentence
In the last two sentences, the man and the coat are the OBJECT of the second sentence
We use relative pronouns to join two short sentences to make a longer sentence
Who = people That/which = things Where = places
The combined sentences plus the relative pronoun is called a relative clause
Person/thing = subject
I met the man who works in the bank. I bought the coat that was in the shop window
Person/thing = object
I met the man who Susan loves. I bought the coat that Susan wanted
When the relative clause defines the subject a relative pronoun must be used. However, when the
relative clause defines the object, the relative pronoun can be missed out:
I met the man Susan loves. I bought the coat Susan wanted
In the examples above, the relative clause cannot be missed out because it defines who/what the
person or thing is:
I met the man. X I met a man. √ I bought the coat. X I bought a coat. √
'Where' can only be missed out if the preposition 'at' is used
The hotel was very expensive. We stayed at it
The hotel where we stayed was very expensive. The hotel we stayed at was very expensive
Nondefining relative clauses
In nondefining relative clauses, 'who' is used for people and 'which' is used for things (you cannot use 'that'). Both these relative pronouns MUST COME AFTER A COMMA
Susan, who is John's sister, met the mananger
My coat, which was very expensive, is over there
Nondefining relative clauses give additional information about the subject and therefore the sentence still makes sence if the relative clause is missed out
Susan met the manager. √ My coat is over there. √
Trang 225/2/2016 Relative Clauses (Intermediate )
Susan met the manager. √ My coat is over there. √
Relative clauses 1 exercises
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