We use defining relative clauses to give essential information about someone or something – information that we need in order to understand what or who is being referred to. A defining relative clause usually comes immediately after the noun it describes. We usually use a relative pronoun (e.g. who, that, which, whose and whom) to introduce a defining relative clause (In the examples, the relative clause is in bold, and the person or thing being referred to is underlined.):
[talking about an actress]
Spoken English: In defining relative clauses we often use that instead of who, whom or which. This is very common in informal speaking:
See also: Subject or objectThe relative pronoun can define the subject or the object of the verb:
No relative pronounWe often leave out the relative pronoun when it is the object of the verb:
See also: PunctuationWarning: In writing, we don’t use commas in defining relative clauses:
Nouns and pronouns in relative clausesWhen the relative pronoun is the subject of the relative clause, we don’t use another personal pronoun or noun in the relative clause because the subject (underlined) is the same:
When the relative pronoun is the object of the relative clause, we don’t use another personal pronoun or noun in the relative clause because the object (underlined) is the same:
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来自: 紫色爆米花 > 《ENGLISH GRAMMAR》