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  1. All of your examples are relative clauses but you have two different grammatical items within them: that/who/which are examples of relative pronouns; where/when are examples of relative adverbs. Generally speaking, you can replace a relative adverb with a relative pronoun plus an appropriate preposition, not just a relative pronoun.

  2. Prepositions in relative clauses. The relative pronoun can also refer to the object of a preposition. In informal styles, the preposition comes after the verb: The house which Mozart was born in is now a museum. (defining relative clause) The house that Mozart was born in is now a museum. (defining relative clause) The house Mozart was born in ...

  3. Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses. The most common relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, that. The relative pronoun we use depends on what we are referring to and the type of relative clause.

  4. Relative clauses 2: Relativos con preposiciones. En nuestros posts defining relative clauses y non-defining relative clauses ya explicamos las diferencias entre estos dos tipos de frases de relativo y vimos los pronombres relativos que se suelen usar con más frecuencia: who, which, that, whom, whose, where, when, why.

    • Euroresidentes
  5. When you do this, make sure you have a relative pronoun (e.g. who or which) in there, and not another type of pronoun (e.g. them or then). After a preposition, use 'which' for things, places or time, or 'whom' of people. Remember that 'what' is not a relative pronoun. We do not use it to join two clauses together.

  6. Relative Pronouns – subject or object (2) B1. Relative Pronouns with prepositions B2. Relative Pronouns – who/which/whom/that B1. A1 Básico A2 Básico alto B1 Intermedio B2 Intermedio alto C1 Dominio. Los relativos en inglés son who, whom, whose, which y that, e introducen las oraciones de relativo.

  7. 30 de abr. de 2019 · Prepositions with Relative Pronouns. When using a relative pronoun as the object of a preposition, it is important to choose the correct pronoun. “Who” should be used when referring to people, while “which” should be used when referring to animals or things. “That” can be used for either people or things, but it is less ...