Relative Clauses
Relative Clauses
Defining vs non-defining
Relative pronouns
Relative pronouns are the words that introduce relative clauses. They can act as the subject or
the object of the relative clause.
Which/that vs what
I gave her the letter which/that I had been keeping since the war. (which/that= the
letter)
He offered to help us, which was a nice gesture. (which= He offered to help us)
We don’t use what as a relative pronoun. It cannot be used to refer back to a sentence or noun.
I gave her the letter which/that I had been keeping since the war.
I gave her the letter what I had been keeping since the war.
He offered to help us, which was a nice gesture.
He offered to help us, what was a nice gesture.
I didn’t like what he did.= I didn’t like the thing/s that he did.
What I don’t understand is why we are here. (what= the thing that)
When the relative pronoun is the complement of a preposition, we can use the preposition
before the relative pronoun or at the end of the relative clause.
It’s not very common to use prepositions before relative pronouns, we just do it in formal
language.
Note that after a preposition, we can only use the pronouns whom or which.
(NOT who or that).
The team signed then the young Maradona, in whose skills everybody had their
hopes.
The most common position of the preposition is at the end of the relative clause.
He wrecked the car for which he had paid a fortune. (Formal; not common in
spoken English)
He wrecked the
car (which/that) he had
paid a
fortune for. (Informal)
Relative adverbs
The coach changed the time when the players had to get up.
=The coach changed the time at which the players had to get up.
The bench where they were sitting was dirty.
=The bench on which they were seated was dirty.
Quantifier + of which/whom
Their daughters, both of whom are in university, don’t visit them very often.
The students, none of whom had failed the exam, were thrilled.
Their house was full of cats, most of which had been found in the street.
The two rooms, neither of which had windows, were small and dirty.