Relative Pronouns & Relative Clauses – That | Which | Who | Whose - English Grammar

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Relative pronouns are used to join two sentences. In other words, they serve to introduce the subordinate clause and to determine the nouns mentioned earlier, whether they are people, places, things, animals or ideas. And it does not matter, whether these nouns singular or plural, masculine or feminine.
The most commonly used relative pronouns in English are which, that, who, whom. In some situations, when and where can also perform the functions of relative pronouns.

Relative Pronouns are used for:
- That – used for defining information about people, objects, animals.
- Which - used for information about objects, animals.
- Who - used for information about people, sometimes about animals.
- Whose - used to express belonging, for humans and animals, and very rarely for objects.

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Tons of thanks my teacher.
Your explanation is utterly perfect.

asmayousufzai
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Great video, but wow, it is in-depth! Even for me, a native English speaker, it's hard to wrap my head around (I can do it, but can I explain it?)!!!

superduperenglishidioms
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This video would have been better if it had explained why many excellent writers use “which” to introduce defining relative clauses. Janet Malcolm is an example.

MrAlexsegal