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Two types of relative clauses:

Non-Defining Extra information about a noun in a sentence The new Woody Allen film , which I saw last week , is very good. Use commas Always use a relative pronoun: who/whom , which whose, where, when. Defining Essential information about a noun in a sentence

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Two types of relative clauses:

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  1. Non-Defining Extra information about a noun in a sentence The new Woody Allen film, which I saw last week, is very good. Use commas Always use a relative pronoun: who/whom,which whose, where, when Defining Essential information about a noun in a sentence You’re the man (that) I saw last week. No commas Can omit pronoun if it is not the SUBJECT of the relative clause That (informal) can replace which / who/ when / why but not where,whose or whom Two types of relative clauses:

  2. Defining relative clauses = No commas A defining relative clause identifies which person or thing we mean exactly. It cannot be left out of the sentence or the meaning of the sentence is incomplete: It’s the bookthat I read yesterday. * It’s the book.(this sentence is incomplete)

  3. Defining relative clauses = No commas • You can omit the pronoun if it is the OBJECT of the relative clause (if there is a SUBJECT and a VERB after the relative pronoun ) It’s the bookthatIread yesterday(omit) It’s the book I read yesterday. The girl wholives next door is French. • We can never omit WHOSE and WHERE

  4. Non-defining relative clauses = with commas This kind of clause gives additional information about a person or thing. The sentence still makes sense without the non-defining relative clause: My neighbour, who studies engineering, is very noisy. My neighbour is very noisy.

  5. Formal / Informal Non-Defining relative clauses (with commas) are more common in written English because they are quite formal. In spoken English we would probably use two sentences. Compare: Elvis Presley, who has sold over one billion albums, died of prescription drug abuse. [written] with Elvis has sold over a billion albums. He died of an overdose. [spoken]

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