Relative Clauses
RELATIVE
CLAUSES
There
are two different types of relative clause:
1. A "defining" or identifying clause, which tells
us which person or thing we are talking about. This kind of clause could often
be information included in brackets (...)
2. A "non-defining" or non-essential clause, which gives
us more information about the person or thing we are talking about.
Examples
·
The farmer (his name was Fred) sold
us some potatoes.
The farmer, whose name was
Fred, sold us some potatoes.
It is important to see the
difference between the two types of clause, as it affects:
·
the choice of pronoun used to introduce the clause,
·
the punctuation - you must use commas with a non-defining
clause.
How to form
relative clauses
DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES
As the name suggests, these
clauses give essential information to define or identify the person or thing we
are talking about. Obviously, this is only necessary if there is more than one
person or thing involved.
Example
·
Dogs that like cats are very unusual.
In this sentence we
understand that there are many dogs, but it is clear that we are only talking
about the ones that
like cats.
Punctuation
·
Commas
are not used in defining relative clauses.
Relative pronouns
The
following relative pronouns are used in defining relative clauses:
|
|
Person
|
Thing
|
Place
|
Time
|
Reason
|
|
Subject
|
who/that
|
which/that
|
|||
|
Object
|
who/whom/that/
|
which/that/
|
where
|
when
|
why
|
|
Possessive
|
whose
|
whose
|
|
|
|
Notes:
1. The relative
pronoun stands in place of a noun.
This noun usually appears
earlier in the sentence:
|
The woman
|
who/that
|
spoke at the meeting
|
was very knowledgeable.
|
|
Noun, subject of
main clause |
relative pronoun referring to 'the woman', subject of 'spoke'
|
verb + rest of relative clause
|
verb + rest of main clause
|
2. Who,
whom and which can be replaced by that. This is very common in spoken English.
3. The
relative pronoun can be omitted when
it is the object of the clause
|
The woman
|
that
|
the man loved
|
was living in New York.
|
|
Noun, subject of main clause
|
relative pronoun, referring to 'the woman', object of 'loved'
|
verb + rest of relative clause
|
verb + rest of main clause.
|
(You can usually decide
whether a relative pronoun is an object because it is normally followed by
another subject + verb.)
4. Whose is used for things as well as for people.
Examples
·
The man whose
car was stolen.
·
A tree whose leaves have fallen.
5. Whom is very formal and is only used in
written English. You can use who/that, or
omit the pronoun completely :
·
The doctor whom/who/that/
I was hoping to see wasn't
on duty.
6. That normally follows words like something, anything, everything, nothing,
all, and
superlatives.
Examples
·
There's something that
you should know.
·
It was the best film that
I've ever seen.
·
A clown is someone who
makes you laugh.
·
An elephant is an animal that
lives in hot countries.
·
The plums that
were in the fridge were
delicious. I have eaten them.
·
Where are the plums (that)
I put in the fridge?
·
Has anyone seen the
book I was reading?
·
Nothing that
anyone does can replace
my lost bag.
·
Let's go to a country where
the sun always shines.
·
They live in the house whose
roof is full of holes.
WHERE TO PUT
THE PREPOSTITION IN A RELATIVE CLAUSE
WHERE TO PUT THE PREPOSTITION IN A
RELATIVE CLAUSE
There are often prepositions
in relative clauses, and the relative pronoun is the object of the preposition. This means that the
preposition can sometimes be omitted.
The preposition is normally
placed at the end of the relative clause:
·
Is that the man (who) you arrived with?
·
Do you know the girl (that) John is talking to?
In formal or written English,
the preposition is often placed before the relative pronoun, and in this case
the pronoun cannot be omitted:
·
The person with whom he is negotiating is
the Chairman of a large company.
·
It is
a society to which many important people belong.
However, this is unusual in
spoken English.
Examples
·
The jungle the
tribe lived in was full
of strange and unusual animals.
·
He liked the people that
he lived with.
·
The tree under
which they had their picnic was
the largest and oldest in the park.
·
To the east of the city was a lake that many people went to on the
weekend.
·
It was the river in
which the children preferred to swim.
NON-DEFINING
RELATIVE CLAUSES
NON-DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES
The information in these
clauses is not essential. It tells us more about someone or something, but it does
not help us to identify them or it.
Compare:
·
Dogs that like
cats are very unusual. (This
tells us which dogs we are talking about).
·
Gorillas, which are large and orignate in Africa,
can sometimes be found in zoos. (This gives us some extra information about
gorillas - we are talking about all gorillas, not just one type or group).
·
John's mother, who
lives in Scotland, has 6 grandchildren. (We know who John's mother is, and
he only has one. The important information is the number of grandchildren, but
the fact that she lives in Scotland might be followed with the words "by
the way" - it is additional information).
Punctuation
Non-defining relative clauses
are always separated from the rest of the sentence by commas. The commas have a
similar function to brackets:
·
My friend John has just written a best-selling novel. (He went
to the same school as me)
·
My friend John, who
went to the same school as me, has just written a best-selling novel.
Relative pronouns in
non-defining clauses
|
Person
|
Thing
|
Place
|
|
|
Subject
|
who
|
which
|
|
|
Object
|
who/whom
|
which
|
where
|
|
Possessive
|
whose
|
Notes
·
In non-defining
clauses, you cannot use 'that' instead of who, whom or which.
·
You cannot leave out the relative pronoun, even when
it is the object of the verb in the relative clause:
·
He gave me the letter, which was in a
blue envelope.
·
He
gave me the letter, which I read immediately
·
The preposition in these clauses can go at the end of
the clause, e.g.
·
This is Stratford-on-Avon, which you have
all heard about.
This pattern is often used in
spoken English, but in written or formal English you can also put the
preposition before the pronoun: e.g. Stratford-on-Avon,
about which many people have written is Shakespeare's birthplace.
·
Non-defining clauses can be introduced by expressions
like all of, many of + relative pronoun:
|
|
Person
|
Thing
|
|
all of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
any of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
(a) few of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
both of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
each of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
either of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
half of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
many of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
most of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
much of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
none of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
one of
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
|
two of etc...
|
+ whom
|
+ which
|
Examples
·
There
were a lot of people at the party, many
of whom I had known for
years.
·
He was
carrying his belongings, many
of which were broken.
·
The
relative pronoun which at the beginning of a non-defining
relative clause, can refer to all the information contained in the previous
part of the sentence, rather than to just one word.
·
Chris
did really well in his exams, which
was a big surprise. (=
the fact that he did well in his exams was a big surprise).
·
A
socialist and a conservative agreed on the new law, which is most unusual. (= the fact that they agreed is
unusual).
Examples
·
My
grandmother, who is dead
now, came from the North of England.
·
I
spoke to Fred, who
explained the problem.
·
The
old man looked at the tree, under
which he had often sat.
·
We
stopped at the museum, which
we'd never been into.
·
She's
studying maths, which many
people hate.
·
I've
just met Susan, whose
husband works in London.
·
He had
thousands of books, most
of which he had read.
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