45 points
what he said is clear to me.
relative clause and principal clause
plz find the answer fast
thx
Answers
Answered by
4
Hello mate here is your answer.
We use who and whom for people, and which for things.
We use that for people or things.
We use relative pronouns to introduce relative clauses, which tell us more about people and things.
2. Relative clauses to postmodify a noun
We use relative clauses to postmodify a noun - to make clear which person or thing we are talking about. In these clauses we can have the relative pronoun who, which, whose or that
as subject (see Clauses Sentences and Phrases)
Isn’t that the woman who lives across the road from you?
The police said the accident that happened last night was unavoidable
The newspaper reported that the tiger which killed its keeper has been put down.
Hope it helps you.
We use who and whom for people, and which for things.
We use that for people or things.
We use relative pronouns to introduce relative clauses, which tell us more about people and things.
2. Relative clauses to postmodify a noun
We use relative clauses to postmodify a noun - to make clear which person or thing we are talking about. In these clauses we can have the relative pronoun who, which, whose or that
as subject (see Clauses Sentences and Phrases)
Isn’t that the woman who lives across the road from you?
The police said the accident that happened last night was unavoidable
The newspaper reported that the tiger which killed its keeper has been put down.
Hope it helps you.
Answered by
0
A relative clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb that 'relates' information about its antecedent.
A relative pronoun is a pronoun that introduces a relative clause.
The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.
-- The pronoun 'who' is a subject only pronoun.
-- The pronoun 'whom' is an object only pronoun.
Please thank the person who returned my keys.
-- The relative clause 'who returned my keys' gives information about its antecedent 'person'.
-- The pronoun 'who' is the subject of the relative clause.
The company for whom I work has a good training program.
-- The relative clause 'for whom I work' gives information about its antecedent 'company'.
-- The pronoun 'whom' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'for'.
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