D.O. We are waiting for Apu. Apu is from India. Subj

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
Advertisements

RELATIVE SENTENCES © BENI SUAREZ PRADO RELATIVE SENTENCES FUNCTION AS ADJECTIVES THERE ARE TWO TYPES DEFINING NON- DEFINING.
Identifying Parts of Speech & their Functions Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Prepositions, Adjectives, & Adverbs; Subjects & Objects.
Relative pronouns and relative clauses. A relative clause gives information about a noun. It immediately follows the noun it describes and often begins.
RELATIVE CLAUSES John’s sister who is an actress arrived yesterday.
Welcome to a presentation on.  Defining relative clauses define or identify which person or thing you are talking about: ◦ The man who came in late is.
Awesome 4 August grammar and vocabulary review
Unit 13: Relative Pronouns
MARISA VIESCA. There are two kinds of relative clauses:  Defining Relative Clauses  Non-Defining Relative Clauses.
RELATIVE SENTENCES 2nd of Bachillerato. DEFINITION They function as an adjective that gives information about one of the elements in the main clause.
Technology in language teaching Instructor : Mr. Nguyen Ngoc Vu, Ph.D. REDUCED RELATIVE CLAUSE Created by: Nguyễn Thị Thanh Mai Nguyễn Thị Quỳnh Trâm.
© Rafael Moreno Esteban Relative nouns and Relative clauses EOI El Puerto 2º CAL Inglés.
RELATIVE CLAUSES Ies Argentona English Seminar. Relative Clauses are formed by joining 2 sentences: - “ Alina is the student”+ “She comes from Russia”:
RELATIVE PRONOUNS DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES NON-DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES. DEFINING (ESPECIFICATIVAS) THEY DEFINE THE NOUN THEY REFER TO, SO THEY ARE ESSENTIAL. THEY DO NOT GO BETWEEN COMMAS WHO / WHICH CAN.
RELATIVE SENTENCES. DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES  Defining relative clauses tell us some essential information about the things or people they refer to:
RELATIVE PRONOUNS AND RELATIVE CLAUSES. The man who phoned you is my doctor. relative clause A clause is part of a sentence. Relative clauses start with.
 DEFINING CLAUSES give essential information about their antecedent and without them the meaning will be incomplete.  These never go between commas.
Relative clauses Introduced by relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that) or relative adverbs (when, where, why)
Relative clauses A murderer is a person. A person committed a murder. A murderer is a person who committed a murder. The defending lawyer made a good impression.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
Dependent clauses are nominal, adjectival, and adverbial clauses Dependent clauses may work like nouns, adjectives, or adverbs in complex sentences.
Subject: English Teacher: Andréia Deluca. They are clauses that qualify a noun. They are introduced by a word which is called RELATIVE PRONOUN. This pronoun.
Relative Clauses By Noelia Villafañe. Why learn Relative Clauses? To give additional info about something without starting another sentence. Text becomes.
We are waiting for Apu. Apu is from India. Same thing in different sentences. D.O. Subj.
Relative clauses December, 2013 Tomašević Snežana.
Relative Pronouns. Relative pronouns are that, who, whom, whose, which. They are used to join clauses to make a complex sentence.
COLEGIO ESCOLAPIAS GANDIA Definition A relative clause is a part of a sentence beginning with a relative pronoun (although this pronoun can be omitted.
Non-Defining Relative Clauses
 The man who came into the room was small and slender  You want to give further information about the man  It cannot be omitted-it is the subject of.
 Grammar 5. There are several pronouns that can be used in adjective clauses: that (people and things) o The new computer that I bought is really fast.
Presenters:Nguyen Hai Thuy Duong Nguyen Hong Minh English 3B.04 Presenters:Nguyen Hai Thuy Duong Nguyen Hong Minh English 3B.04.
RELATIVE CLAUSES M. Martín Abeleira..
Relative clauses Relative pronouns / adverbs Leaving out the pronoun Defining relative clauses Non-defining relative clauses.
Defining and Non-defining Relative Clauses Grammar Guide.
DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES I Defining relative clauses give essential information.  The man lives next door. He is very friendly. The man who lives next.
RELATIVE CLAUSES. What are relative clauses? Subordinate clauses which allow us to add information about people or things we are talking to, without a.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
By Paola Suárez.  Defining Relative Clauses  Non-Defining Relative Clauses.
RELATIVE PRONOUNS WHO WHOM (object) WHICH WHOSE THAT
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.
Grammar 2 The Second Semester Presented by Dr. Mohamed Sha’at.
Relative clauses describe the preceding noun.
RELATIVE CLAUSES. DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSE We use defining relative clauses to add essential information to a sentence. The clause goes immediately after.
Adjective Clauses. Review: What is an adjective? What is a clause?
D.O. We are waiting for Apu. Apu is from India. Subj
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
Pronouns Mrs.Azzah.
Relative Clauses & Relative Pronouns RELATIVE PRONOUNS
RELATIVES.
D.O. We are waiting for Apu. Apu is from India. Subj
Relative clauses Introduced by relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that) or relative adverbs (when, where, why)
Relative Clause.
Relative nouns and Relative clauses
RELATIVE PRONOUNS WHO WHOM (object) WHICH WHOSE THAT
Adjective Clauses - 3 A noun + of which
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
D.O. We are waiting for Apu. Apu is from India. Subj
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
Relative clauses John is the man who has won the lottery.
Relative Clauses & Relative Pronouns RELATIVE PRONOUNS
RELATIVE CLAUSES.
RELATIVE PRONOUNS WHO WHOM (object) WHICH WHOSE THAT
Presentation transcript:

D.O. We are waiting for Apu. Apu is from India. Subj Same thing in different sentences. Apu is from India.

We are waiting for Apu, who India. is from Apu is from India. Subj

We are waiting for Apu, who is from India. The two sentences can be linked into one. We use a relative pronoun to substitute the common item and join the two sentences in one. We are waiting for Apu , who is from India. This is the main clause. This is the subordinate clause. We are waiting for Apu, who is from India. Subordinate/Dependent clause Its meaning is incomplete if we remove the main clause. Main /independent clause If we remove the subordinate clause from the sentence, its meaning is still complete.

LINKING WORDS

LINKING WORDS

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 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

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 book that I read yesterday. * It’s the book. (this sentence is incomplete)

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 book that I read yesterday (omit) It’s the book I read yesterday. The girl who lives next door is French. We can never omit WHOSE and WHERE

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.

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]

Verb + preposition When the verb is followed by a preposition in the relative clause we can use two structures: The woman is a lawyer. I spoke to a woman Formal: Preposition + rel.pronoun The woman to whom* I spoke is a lawyer. (*We can’t omit the relative pronoun after a preposition) Or Informal: Preposition after the verb The woman (who) I spoke to is a lawyer.

Relative Adverbs Time: when or in/on/at + which or that That was the year when/that/in which I got my degree. 11 September 2001 was the day when/that/on which people’s attitude towards terrorism changed. The adverb (when) can be omitted. 11 September 2001 was the day people’s attitude towards terrorism changed.

Relative Adverbs Place: where or in/on/at + which or that That’s the factory where/in which they make chemicals. That’s the spot where/on which the battle took place. The adverb (where) cannot generally be omitted.

Relative Adverbs: Reason: why (for which) I will explain the reasons why /for which the accident occurred The adverb (why) can be omitted. I will explain the reasons the accident occurred

Relative pronouns Possessive: whose It takes the place of his, her, their or a noun in possessive case ‘s. Andy Warhol was a pop artist whose paintings are famous worldwide.(His paintings are famous…) Charlie, whose sister lives in London, is travelling to England this summer. (Charlie’s sister lives in London).