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RELATIVE SENTENCES :RELATIVE SENTENCES Carmen Torres
What’s a relative clause? :What’s a relative clause? A subordinate clause depending on a main clause
THE ANTECEDENT is a word that belongs to the main clause. It is the person, object, place, etc. the relative clause refers to.
THE RELATIVE CLAUSE always follows its antecedent.
A RELATIVE PRONOUN joins the antecedent to the relative clause.
Types of Relative clauses :Types of Relative clauses Defining Relative Clauses
Non-defining Relative clauses
Defining Relative Clauses :Defining Relative Clauses They specify the person, object, time or place we are talking about.
These sentences are introduced by relative pronouns:
WHO or THAT, if the relative sentence refers to people
WHICH or THAT, if the relative sentence refers to things
WHOSE for possession
WHEN for days, months, years...
WHERE for places.
Defining Relative Clause :Defining Relative Clause COMMON FEATURES
Who, which, that (and sometimes when and where) can be omitted (to make a contact clause) if they do not act as subjects of the relative sentence.
They are necessary to understand the antecedent
They are never placed between commas
When the relative pronoun goes with a preposition we normally omit it and place the preposition at the end of the relative clause.
If the relative is that, even it is not omitted, the preposition goes to the end.
Non-Defining Relative Clause :Non-Defining Relative Clause They add information about the antecedent.
These sentences are introduced by relative pronouns:
WHO, if the relative sentence refers to people
WHICH, if the relative sentence refers to things
WHOSE for possession
WHEN for days, months, years...
WHERE for places.
Non-Defining Relative Clause :Non-Defining Relative Clause COMMON FEATURES
The relative pronoun can never be omitted.
They are not necessary to understand the antecedent.
They are always placed between commas.
Remember :Remember Defining Relative
No commas
Omit the relative pronoun except when SUBJECT Non-Defining Relative
Between commas
No omission Relative Pronouns
WHO: refers to people
WHICH: refers to things
WHOSE: for possession
WHEN: for time
WHERE : for places.
WHAT: (lo que)
Examples :Examples The lessons which she liked better were those ...............she learned from others
That was the subject ............. I was talking about
I could not understand ......... they wanted to know.
This is exactly ............ I wanted to find out.
My brother was the man ............ was here a moment ago.
My brother,……… was here a moment ago, has written you a letter.
More examples :More examples The Constitution ……… Spain voted in 1978 was not real until 1981, after the 23rd February
Arrau, the well-known pianist, ......... everybody admires, will play here soon.
I personally know that author ......... books give us so much pleasure.
This is the bed .......... Queen Elizabeth slept in.
John is the boy ....... was rude to this lady.
This is the lady ......... John was rude to.