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Relative Pronouns 1188 Views


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English Language

Transcript

00:00

Thank you We sneak in relative pronouns Allah shmoop robin

00:07

is having a difficult time with the love letter she's

00:09

writing to her crush should she say you are the

00:12

man whom i've adored since freshman year or you are

00:16

the man that i've adored since freshman year Yikes Teenage

00:20

love is hard enough Does robin really have to deal

00:22

with grammar confusion to well the part of grammar that's

00:26

throwing a wrench into robin's dreams of boyfriend bliss is

00:29

called the relative pronoun no relative opponents aren't named after

00:33

those family members of yours who liked to sit on

00:35

the front porch at sundown strumming banjos and drinking moonshine

00:38

instead Relative pronouns are so named because they introduced relative

00:43

clauses so let's break it down A relative clause is

00:46

a kind of dependent clause meaning it modifies something a

00:50

word a phrase whatever In the main clause of a

00:52

sentence whatever item the relative clause is modifying is called

00:57

an antis edith about that five dollar word is it

01:00

Amaze your friends and press them all Not really art

01:05

There are two types of relative clauses restrictive relative clauses

01:09

and non restrictive relative clauses Let's start with a restrictive

01:12

relative clause This kind of klaus has two characteristics Relative

01:16

pronoun introducing it is not separated from the main clause

01:20

by a comma And the restrictive klaus supplies some bit

01:24

of crucial information without which the sentence wouldn't make sense

01:28

before we move on to some examples of restrictive relative

01:31

clause let's go over the relative pronouns we're likely to

01:33

encounter They include who home whoever whomever who's that and

01:40

which you see here towards what When and where can

01:43

also sometimes serve as relative pronounced Okay time for some

01:47

examples of restrictive relative clauses So say we have the

01:50

sense This is the guy Okay What guy are we

01:54

talking about Why are we talking about him Well this

01:57

is where the restrictive relative clause comes in This is

02:00

the guy who has captured robin's heart here the relative

02:04

pronoun who is the subject of the restrictive relative clause

02:09

And how do we know this is a restrictive relative

02:11

clause While there's no comma between guy and who and

02:14

the relative clause provides an essential piece of information namely

02:18

that robin is crushing on this dude right here A

02:21

relative pronoun can also appear is the object of a

02:24

restrictive relative thrown out However we tend to strike this

02:27

type of relative pronoun from sentences as unnecessary For example

02:32

while we could write robin's crushes wearing the cologne that

02:36

she loves we don't need to include the glad unless

02:39

we're being formal so our sense can read robin's crushes

02:43

wearing the cologne she loves Say we have this ends

02:46

the heinous which to whom robin's crushes speaking is actually

02:51

his girlfriend We can ditch that whom like robin wishes

02:55

her beloved would ditch his girlfriend so that our sense

02:58

reads the heinous which robbins crush is speaking to is

03:02

actually his girlfriend Finally the relative pronoun who's can be

03:06

used to indicate possession in a restrictive relative clause as

03:10

in the girl whose boyfriend robin wants the steel found

03:14

a burning bag of dog poop on her doorstep yesterday

03:17

Robin you haven't even given your crush that letter yet

03:19

There's no need to declare all out war on his

03:21

lady friend onto relative pronounce in non restrictive relative clauses

03:27

Here the relative pronoun is separated from the antis eaten

03:30

by a comma most of the time and the information

03:33

contained within the relative clause is unimportant Un essential inconsequential

03:38

One more thing non restrictive relative closet generally start with

03:42

a relative pronoun which a relative pronoun conserve is the

03:46

subject of a non restrictive relative clause as in this

03:49

examples robin's love letter which was twenty pages long wouldn't

03:54

fit into her crushes locker A relative pronoun can also

03:57

serve as the object of a non restrictive relative clause

04:00

as in this example letter which robin had worked so

04:04

hard to write got majorly wrinkled from her attempts to

04:08

stuff it into the locker got it How do we

04:11

know that these two examples include non restrictive relative clause

04:14

is well in both cases akama appears between the relative

04:18

pronoun witch and the rest of the sentence Any information

04:22

in a non restrictive relative clauses doesn't really matter We

04:26

have just one more thing to say about relative pronoun

04:28

when referring to people in restrictive clauses we can use

04:32

the relative pronouns that or hoo so long as we're

04:35

speaking informally For example while we could say robin is

04:39

the kind of person who obsesses over guys we could

04:42

also say robin is the kind of person that obsesses

04:45

over guys Both ways are correct however if we're speaking

04:49

Formally about a particular person we need to use the

04:52

relative pronoun who for example the girl who is dating

04:56

robin's Crush has wised up to robin's activities And now

04:59

that we've cleared up robin's confusion regarding relative pronouns we

05:02

wish her good luck is She attempts to inform her

05:04

crush of her undying devotion She's going to need it

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