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  1. Grammar explanation. Relative clauses give us information about the person or thing mentioned. Defining relative clauses give us essential informationinformation that tells us who or what we are talking about. The woman who lives next door works in a bank. These are the flights that have been cancelled.

    • Defining and Non-Defining
    • Defining Relative Clauses
    • Non-Defining Relative Clauses
    • Prepositions and Relative Clauses
    • Whose
    • Where / When / Why

    A defining relative clausetells which noun we are talking about: 1. I like the woman who lives next door. (If I don't say 'who lives next door', then we don't know which woman I mean). A non-defining relative clausegives us extra information about something. We don't need this information to understand the sentence. 1. I live in London, which has s...

    1: The relative pronoun is the subject: First, let's consider when the relative pronoun is the subject of a defining relative clause. We can use 'who', 'which' or 'that'. We use 'who' for people and 'which' for things. We can use 'that' for people or things. The relative clause can come after the subject or the object of the sentence. We can't drop...

    We don't use 'that' in non-defining relative clauses, so we need to use 'which' if the pronoun refers to a thing, and 'who' if it refers to a person. We can't drop the relative pronoun in this kind of clause, even if the relative pronoun is the object of the clause. (Clause comes after the subject) 1. My boss, who is very nice, lives in Manchester....

    If the verb in the relative clause needs a preposition, we put it at the end of the clause: For example: 1. listen to The music is good. Julie listens to the music. → The music (which / that) Julie listens tois good. 1. work with My brother met a woman. I used to work with the woman. → My brother met a woman (who / that) I used to work with. 1. go ...

    'Whose' is always the subject of the relative clause and can't be left out. It replaces a possessive. It can be used for people and things. The dog is over there. The dog's / its owner lives next door. → The dog whoseowner lives next door is over there. The little girl is sad. The little girl's / her doll was lost. → The little girl whosedoll was l...

    We can sometimes use these question words instead of relative pronouns and prepositions. I live in a city. I study in the city. → I live in the city where I study. → I live in the city that / which I study in. → I live in the city in whichI study. The bar in Barcelona is still there. I met my wife in that bar. → The bar in Barcelona where I met my ...

  2. Defining relative clauses. We use defining relative clauses to give essential information about someone or somethinginformation that we need in order to understand what or who is being referred to. A defining relative clause usually comes immediately after the noun it describes.

  3. Relative adverbs. Defining relative clauses. Non-defining relative clauses. How to shorten relative clauses. Exercises and Tests. Exercises and tests on relative clauses. We use relative clauses to give additional information about something without starting another sentence.

  4. Qué es un relative clause (oración de relativo) Conocidos como oraciones de relativo en español, como lo mencioné al principio es una oración o frase que se subordina o depende de una oración principal. Existen dos tipos: defining relative clauses y non defining relative clauses. Hablemos de cada uno de ellos: Defining relative clauses.

  5. We use relative clauses to describe or give extra information about something we have already mentioned. We often use relative pronouns (e.g. who, where, that, which, whose) to introduce relative clauses.

  6. 18 de jul. de 2023 · Las "relative clauses" son una herramienta útil para agregar detalles y precisión a las frases, pero es importante dominar su uso para evitar ambigüedades o errores gramaticales. En este artículo te explicamos qué son y cómo utilizarlas correctamente. Alicia Burton. Actualizado a 18 de julio de 2023, 12:20. Guardar Compartir Imprimir.