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What Are Relative Clauses?
Relative clauses give extra information about a noun. They start with relative pronouns (who, which, that, whose, where, when) and help us describe things more specifically.
Without relative clause: I met a woman. With relative clause: I met a woman who speaks five languages.
The relative clause "who speaks five languages" gives us more information about "a woman."
Relative Pronouns — Quick Overview
Different relative pronouns are used for different things:
- who = people
- which = things, animals
- that = people or things (informal)
- whose = possession (people or things)
- where = places
- when = times
In this part we'll focus on the three you'll use most: who, which, and that. We cover whose, where and when in Part 2.
WHO — For People
Use "who" when talking about people.
Examples
- The woman who lives next door is a doctor.
- I know someone who speaks Spanish.
- The man who called you is waiting outside.
- Students who work hard usually succeed.
Who can be the subject or object of the relative clause:
Subject (who does the action):
- The girl who broke the window ran away. (she broke it)
Object (who receives the action):
- The girl who I met yesterday is very nice. (I met her)
- The people who we invited didn't come. (we invited them)
WHICH — For Things and Animals
Use "which" when talking about things or animals.
Examples
- The book which is on the table is mine.
- I bought a car which has low fuel consumption.
- The dog which bit me was very aggressive.
- The movie which we watched was excellent.
Which can also be the subject or object:
- Subject: The car which crashed was going too fast.
- Object: The car which I bought is red. (I bought it)
THAT — For People or Things
"That" can replace "who" or "which" in many cases. It's more informal and very common in spoken English.
Examples
For people (instead of "who"):
- The woman that lives next door is a doctor.
- I know someone that speaks Spanish.
For things (instead of "which"):
- The book that is on the table is mine.
- The car that I bought is red.
Important: "That" is less formal than "who/which" but very common in everyday English. Note that "that" cannot be used in non-defining (comma) clauses — more on that in Part 2!
Quick Reference: who, which, that
| Pronoun | Use for | Formal? | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| who | People | Yes | The woman who lives here... |
| which | Things / animals | Yes | The book which is on the table... |
| that | People or things | Informal | The car that I bought... |
Common Mistakes with who, which, that
❌ Mistake 1: Wrong relative pronoun
- ❌ The woman which I met was nice. (people = who/that)
- ✅ The woman who I met was nice.
❌ Mistake 2: Using "what" instead of "that"
- ❌ The book what I read was good.
- ✅ The book that I read was good.
❌ Mistake 3: Double subject
- ❌ The man who he lives next door is friendly.
- ✅ The man who lives next door is friendly. (remove "he")
Practice
Choose who, which, or that:
- The woman _______ lives next door is a teacher.
- The book _______ I bought is on the table.
- The people _______ we met were very friendly.
- The car _______ crashed was going too fast.
Combine the sentences using a relative clause:
- I met a woman. She speaks five languages. → I met a woman _______.
- The car is mine. You saw it yesterday. → The car _______ is mine.
Correct the mistakes:
- The woman which I met was nice.
- The book what I read was good.
- The man who he lives next door is friendly.
Answers
- who / that
- which / that
- who / that (or omit — see Part 2!)
- which / that
- who speaks five languages
- which / that you saw yesterday
- The woman who I met was nice.
- The book that I read was good.
- The man who lives next door is friendly.
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Ready for more? 👉 Part 2: Defining vs. Non-Defining Clauses & When to Omit Pronouns
Part of the LearnFast.life Grammar Series