There Are Women Who Add Clase Sentence
Answers
There are two main types of relative clause. One is for making it clear who or what we are talking about. Teachers call this type ‘defining relative clauses’, and they don’t have commas around them:
The woman who gave me the flowers is my neighbour.
This is the chair that I bought yesterday.
For these relative clauses, we use who for people, which for things, and (especially in speech) that for either people or things.
The other type is for giving extra information. These are called ‘non-defining relative clauses’, and they do have commas:
The woman, who was a friend of mine, gave me some flowers.
The furniture, which was very old, belonged to my father.
For these, we use who for people and which for things. We don’t use ‘that’.
One very common mistake that learners of English make with relative clauses is to put in an extra pronoun when it isn’t needed: