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Relative pronouns

The relative pronouns are:

Subject who who/whom whose
Object which which whose
Possessive that that -

We use relative pronouns to introduce relative clauses. Relative clauses tell us more about people and things:

We use:

Two kinds of relative clause


1. We use relative clauses to make clear which person or thing we are talking about:

In this kind of relative clause, we can use that instead of who or which:

We can leave out the pronoun if it is the object of the relative clause:

The relative pronoun is the subject/object of the relative clause, so we do not repeat the subject/object:

2. We also use relative clauses to give more information about a person, thing or situation:

With this kind of relative clause, we use commas (,) to separate it from the rest of the sentence.

Whose and Whom


We use whose as the possessive form of who:

We sometimes use whom as the object of a verb or preposition:

but nowadays we normally use who:

Relative pronouns with prepositions


When who(m) or which have a preposition, the preposition can come at the beginning of the clause:

or at the end of the clause:

But when that has a preposition, the preposition always comes at the end:

When and Where


We can use when with times and where with places to make it clear which time or place we are talking about:

We can leave out when:

We often use quantifiers and numbers with relative pronouns:

all of which/whom most of which/whom many of which/whom
lots of which/whom a few of which/whom none of which/whom
one of which/whom two of which/whom etc