English, asked by itzcutekudi21, 1 month ago

difference between defining and non-defining clauses
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Answers

Answered by llMrAttitudell01
1

QUESTION:

difference between defining and non-defining clauses

Explanation:

Non-defining clauses still add extra information, but not in the same way. While they tell you something additional, they're not necessary to the meaning of the sentence, but just add an extra non-essential dimension. .The only difference is that you cannot use “that” with a non-defining clause, unlike defining clauses.

Answered by XxitzurdaddyxX
2

Answer:

Defining clauses.

While both types of relative clauses add extra information to the sentence, a defining relative clause clearly adds detail about a specific noun that is defined.

Let’s look at some examples:

“My brother who finished university this summer is spending the year travelling.”

“The house whose doors are shuttered is rumoured to be haunted!”

Non-defining clauses

Non-defining clauses still add extra information, but not in the same way. While they tell you something additional, they’re not necessary to the meaning of the sentence, but just add an extra non-essential dimension.

For example:

“The private yacht, which was rumoured to be the most expensive in the world, belonged to the mysterious couple.”

While the clause certainly tells you something interesting about the topic, the sentence would still retain the main meaning conveyed without it:

“The private yacht belonged to the mysterious couple.”

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