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Answered by sabahatpirjade04
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Relative pronouns  

Grammar > Nouns, pronouns and determiners > Pronouns > Relative pronouns

from English Grammar Today

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.

who

people and sometimes pet animals

defining and non-defining

which

animals and things

defining and non-defining; clause referring to a whole sentence

that

people, animals and things; informal

defining only

whose

possessive meaning;

for people and animals usually; sometimes for things in formal situations

defining and non-defining

whom

people in formal styles or in writing; often with a preposition; rarely in conversation; used instead of who if who is the object

defining and non-defining

no relative pronoun

when the relative pronoun defines the object of the clause

defining only

(In the examples, the relative pronoun is in brackets to show where it is not essential; the person or thing being referred to is underlined.)

We don’t know the person who donated this money.

We drove past my old school, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.

He went to the school (that) my father went to.

The Kingfisher group, whose name was changed from Woolworths earlier this year, includes about 720 high street shops. Superdrug, which last week announced that it is buying Medicare, is also part of the group.

The parents (whom/who/that) we interviewed were all involved in education in some way.

See also:

Relative clauses: defining and non-defining

Relative clauses referring to a whole sentence

Relative pronouns: who

We use who in relative clauses to refer to people, and sometimes to pet animals. We use it to introduce defining and non-defining relative clauses:

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