- How do you use relative adjectives?
- What is a relative adjective clause?
- What are the 5 types of relative clauses?
- What is the difference between relative clause and relative pronoun?
How do you use relative adjectives?
Relative adjective clauses: Relative adjective clauses provide additional information by modifying nouns or noun phrases. For example, in the sentence, “The house where I grew up is getting renovated,” the relative adjective clause “where I grew up” is modifying the noun “house.”
What is a relative adjective clause?
What is a relative clause? A relative clause is one kind of dependent clause. It has a subject and verb, but can't stand alone as a sentence. It is sometimes called an “adjective clause” because it functions like an adjective—it gives more information about a noun.
What are the 5 types of relative clauses?
Using Relative Clauses
There are five relative pronouns—that, which, who, whom, and whose—and three relative adverbs—where, when, and why.
What is the difference between relative clause and relative pronoun?
A relative pronoun is a word like “that” or “which” or “who”, so a relative clause is a clause that begins with a relative pronoun. In the sentence “The dragon who breathed blue fire has retired,” “who breathed blue fire” is a relative clause.