اللغة الإنجليزية 10 فصل ثاني

العاشر

icon

Unit 8

Lesson 2

Student’s Book page 63

                                    GRAMMAR

GRAMMAR: Non-defining relative clauses

Non-defining relative clauses

● Non-defining relative clauses are used to give more detail about a particular person, place or thing that is being talked about. The non-defining relative clause (underlined in the examples below) is usually connected to the main clause by a relative pronoun such as who, which, where or when.

We use:

-who to refer to people;

-which to refer to things and animals;

-where to refer to places

-when to times.

-Whose is the possessive form of who.

● A non-defining relative clause differs from a defining relative clause in that it gives additional, rather than essential, information and, without it, the sentence would still convey meaning.

● Non-defining relative clauses follow a noun and are enclosed between two commas (or dashes or brackets), unless completing the sentence.

● In non-defining relative clauses, the relative pronoun is never omitted.