English, asked by rehmanch555, 10 months ago

use of relative pronoun​

Answers

Answered by Kislaysrivastava96
1

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A relative pronoun is a type of pronoun that often introduces dependent (or relative) clauses in sentences. They also can stand alone as the subject or object of a sentence. There is a specific list of relative pronouns, and here they are: who, whoever, whom, whomever, that, which, when, where, and whose.

The relative pronoun in each example is italicized. The cyclist who won the race trained hard. The pants that I bought yesterday are already stained.

The first thing we should mention is that relative pronouns introduce relative clauses. A relative clause is a type of dependent clause (a clause that can't stand by itself as a complete sentence). It adds extra information to a sentence. The five relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, and that.

Whom + prepositions.

Whom + prepositions.more formal less formal

Whom + prepositions.more formal less formalThere was only one person to whom the old man spoke.

There was only one person who the old man spoke to.

Answered by Anonymous
1

here is yr correct answer----

A RELATIVE PRONOUN IS USED TO CONNECT A CLAUSE OR PHRASE TO A NOUN OR PRONOUN.

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