Material - Relative Clauses
Material - Relative Clauses
• Combining sentences
Note how sentences are combined.
Subject: This is Jean. She bought my car.
Jean is the person who bought my car.
She is not repeated, as the person is the subject.
Object: That is Jean's car. I used to own it.
That's the car that I used to own.
It is not repeated, as the car is the object.
Defining or non-
defining • Defining
Defining clauses give important information which tells us exactly what is
being referred to.
That book which you lent me is really good.
This indicates which book we are talking about. Without the relative clause,
it might be difficult to understand the meaning.
• Non-defining
Non-defining clauses add extra information. They are separated by commas
in writing, and by a pause on either side (where the commas are) in
speaking.
The book, which I hadn't read, was still on the shelf.
This gives extra information about the book. We could miss out the relative
clause and the meaning would still be clear.
Omitting the
relative pronoun • Defining relative clauses
In a defining relative clause we can leave out the relative pronoun if it is the
object of the clause.
That's the car (that) I used to own.
We cannot miss out the relative pronoun if it is the subject of the clause.
That's the woman who bought my car.
6.i
FIRST C E R T I F I C A T E L A N G U A G E P R A C T I C E
Underline any relative pronouns that can be left out in these sentences.
c) The girl whose bag I offered to carry turned out to be an old friend.
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G R A M M A R 11 R E L A T I V E CLAUSES
4 Put a suitable relative pronoun in each space, or leave the space blank where
possible.
5 Make one new sentence from each pair of sentences. Begin as shown, and use
the word given in capitals.
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FIRST C E R T I F I C A T E L A N G U A G E P R A C T I C E
a) The hotel was full of guests. The hotel was miles from anywhere. The guests
had gone there to admire the scenery.
The hotel, which was miles from anywhere, was full of guests
.who had gone there to admire the scenery
b) I lent you a book. It was written by a friend of mine. She lives in France.
The book I
c) A woman's jewels were stolen. A police officer was staying in the same hotel.
The woman was interviewed by him.
The woman whose
d) A goal was scored by a teenager. He had come on as substitute. This goal won
the match.
The goal which
g) My friend Albert has decided to buy a motorbike. His car was stolen last week.
My friend Albert,
h) Carol is a vegetarian. I cooked a meal for her last week. She enjoyed it.
Carol,
7 Put one suitable word in each space, or leave the space blank where possible.
Murder At The Station by Lorraine Small. Episode 5. Trouble on the 6.15. The story
so far: Jane Platt, (1) who is travelling to London because of a
mysterious letter, is the only person (2) witnesses a murder at
Victoria Station. The detective to (3) she gives her statement then
disappears. Jane goes to an office in Soho to answer the letter (4)
she had received. There she discovers that her uncle Gordon, (5)
G R A M M A R 11 RELATIVE CLAUSES
lives in South America, has sent her a small box (6) she is only to
open if in trouble. Jane, (7) parents have never mentioned an
Uncle Gordon, is suspicious of the box, (8) she gives to her friend
Tony. They go to Scotland Yard and see Inspector Groves, (9) has
not heard of the Victoria Station murder, (10) was not reported to
the police. Jane gives Inspector Groves the murdered man's ticket
(11) she found beside his body. Then Jane and Tony decide to go
to Redhill, (12) was the town (13) the murdered man
had come from. On the train they meet a man, (14) face is
somehow familiar to Jane, (15) says he knows her Uncle Gordon...
8 These sentences are all grammatically possible, but not appropriate in speech.
Rewrite each sentence so that it ends w i t h the preposition in italics.
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FIRST C E R T I F I C A T E L A N G U A G E P R A C T I C E
Key points 1 Long sentences with relative clauses are more common in writing. In speech it
is more usual to join shorter clauses with conjunctions.
The hotel, which was miles from anywhere, was full of guests. (writing)
The hotel was miles from anywhere. It was full of guests. (speech)
The hotel was miles from anywhere, and it was full of guests. (speech)
2 In speech, relative pronouns are usually left out when they are the object of the
clause.
This is the hook I told you about.
3 In speech it is common to end relative clauses with a preposition.
That's the girl I live next door to.