Relative clauses (2)--clauses
with or without who/that/which
A. Look again at these example
sentences from Unit 91:
* The woman [who] lives next
door is a doctor. (or The woman that lives...)
[The woman] lives next door.
who(= the woman) is the subject
* Where is the cheese [that]
was in the fridge? (or ... the cheese which was...)
[The cheese] was in the
fridge. that(= the cheese) is the subject
You must use who/that/which
when it is the subject of the relative clause. You cannot say 'The woman
lives next door is a doctor'
or 'Where is the cheese was in the fridge?'
B. Sometimes who/that/which is
the object of the verb. For example:
*. The woman [who] I wanted to
see was away on holiday.
I wanted to see [the woman].
who(= the woman) is the object. I is the subject
* Have you found the keys
[that] you lost?
You lost [the keys]. that(=
the keys) is the object. you is the subject
When who/that/which is the
object, you can leave it out. So you can say:
* The woman I wanted to see
was away. or The woman who I wanted to see...
* Have you found the keys you
lost? or ... the keys that you lost?
* The dress Ann bought doesn't
fit her very well. or The dress that Ann bought...
* Is there anything I can do?
or ... anything that I can do?
Note that we say:
the keys you lost (not 'the
keys you lost them')
the dress Ann bought (not
'bought it')
C. Notice the position of
prepositions(in/at/with etc.) in relative clauses:
do you know the woman?--Tom is
talking [to] her
-> Do you know the woman
(who/that) Tom is talking [to]?
the bed--I slept [in] it last
night - wasn't very comfortable
-> The bed (that/which) I
slept in last night wasn't very comfortable.
* Are these the keys
(that/which) you were looking for?
* The woman (who/that) he fell
in love with left him after a few weeks.
* The man (who/that) I was
sitting next to on the plane talked all the time.
In all these examples, you can
leave out who/that/which.
Note that we say:
the books you were looking for
(not 'the books you were looking for them')
D. You cannot use what in
sentences like these:
* Everything (that) they said
was true. (not 'Everything what they said ...')
* I gave her all the money
(that) I had. (not '... all the money what I had')
What = the thing(s) that:
* Did you hear what they said?
(= the things that they said)
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