English, asked by swati7466, 2 months ago

friends help what is a relative pronouns​

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Answered by JustinSeagull23
12

Answer:

A relative pronoun is a pronoun that marks a relative clause. It serves the purpose of conjoining modifying information about an antecedent referent. An example is the word that in the sentence "This is the house that Jack built."

Answered by TYKE
1

Answer:

A relative pronoun is a pronoun that marks a relative clause. It serves the purpose of conjoining modifying information about an antecedent referent.

An example is the word that in the sentence "This is the house that Jack built." Here the relative pronoun that conjoins the relative clause "Jack built," which modifies the noun house in the main sentence. That has an anaphoric relationship to its antecedent "house" in the main clause.

In the English language, the following are the most common relative pronouns: which, that, whose, whoever, whomever, who and whom.

According to some dependency grammar theories, a relative pronoun does not simply mark the subordinate (relative) clause but also may be considered to play the role of a noun within that clause. For example, in the relative clause "that Jack built" given above, the pronoun "that" may be construed to syntactically function as the object of the verb "built." Compare this with "Jack built the house after he married," where the conjunction after marks the subordinate clause after he married, but does not play the role of any noun within that clause.

In a relative clause, a relative pronoun takes the number (singular or plural) and the person (first, second or third) of its antecedent.

For more information on the formation and uses of relative clauses—with and without relative pronouns—see Relative clause. For detailed information about relative clauses and relative pronouns in English, see English relative clause.

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