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Relative clauses
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. Learn more about these constructions by watching the video!
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- At2:43,
The sentence--The woman who always wore a red hat came into the cafe every Sunday.
As the information "who always wore a red hat", is extra, shouldn't it be separated by commas? So it becomes.
The woman, who always wore a red hat, came into the cafe every Sunday.
It's contradicted by the fact that we don't use a comma to separate a dependent clause (if it is not in the beginning of the sentence).
Commas are hard!(45 votes)- who always wore a red hat is an adjective phrase/clause that doesn't need to be enclosed in commas.(14 votes)
- At1:16David calls "The Boy who lived" a noun phrase with the relative clause: "who lived". However is it not true that "The boy who lived" has both a subject and verb components. Therefore "The boy who lived" should be a clause. Should it not?(18 votes)
- Yes you are correct. but was talking about a depended clause which is different form a normal clause(0 votes)
- how old are yall im 12 any older then me(8 votes)
- Isn't "the boy who lived" from Harry Potter?(6 votes)
- That it is! You've guessed well.(6 votes)
- Is there a video about noun clauses?(6 votes)
- You said "the boy who lived " is a noun phrase,isn't it a noun clause? Since it has a noun and a verb(4 votes)
- By the definition “can function as a single part of speech, it would be a noun phrase because, well, you could substitute it for one noun in a sentence. By the definition of containing a noun/subject and verb/predicate, though, I would agree that it’s also characteristic of a clause. More specifically, I’d break it down like this:
The (article modifying “boy”)
boy (noun)
who (relative pronoun, subject of relative clause)
lived (verb, predicate of the subject “who)
In short, at least the way I see it, this is probably a noun phrase with a relative clause branching off of it.(5 votes)
- I love Khan Academy.(5 votes)
- "The boy (coughing) who lives," said Dumbledore.(4 votes)
- Snape, Tonks and so many others. How many people have to die for the boy who lived?(3 votes)
- isnt "the" a relative clause in "we need to find a store that sells "the" new willamette cold brew coffee ice cream"?(2 votes)
- No. Relative pronouns are words like "that" "which" and "who". They refer back to a noun or pronoun (usually the subject) already in the sentence. They can then form clauses, which is a complete thought involving a subject and a predicate. Relative pronouns are single words; relative clause are complete thoughts introduced by a relative pronoun.
Let me give an example.
"Who was the person that was president in 1805?"
The word "that" is referring back to the word "person" and giving more detail and information to it by introducing the clause.
However, the word "the" is an article, not a relative pronoun. It cannot refer back to anything previously in the sentence; it can only specify the words directly after it.
So in the example in your question, the word "that" is your relative pronoun, because it refers back to the word "store". The relative clause is "that sells the new Williamette cold brew coffee ice cream", giving more information about the store.
Does that make sense?(7 votes)
Video transcript
- [David] Hello,
grammarians, hello, Rosie. - [Rosie] Hi, David. - [David] So today we're gonna talk about a special kind of
dependent clause, which again, is a kind of clause
that can't be a sentence on its own called a relative clause. So a relative clause is a dependent clause that starts with a relative pronoun So okay, so a relative pronoun is a word like who or that or
which or whose or where that like any pronoun, substitutes in for another part of the sentence. So for example, Harry
Potter is also known as. - [Rosie] The boy who lived. - [David] The boy who lived. - [Rosie] Is that Dumbledore? - [David] Yeah, that's my Dumbledore. - [Rosie] I like it. - [David] Thank you. You can see in this little
snippet who is subbing in for the boy, right, so it is behaving like a pronoun, but a relative pronoun, and so we've got this
thing here, who lived. The boy lived, on its
own, could be a sentence, but who lived cannot be. - [Rosie] Well who lived
is describing the boy. - [David] So right now,
all of this together is just a noun phrase, but who lived within this noun phrase is a relative clause. So, we need to find a
store that sells the new Willamette cold brew coffee ice cream. - [Rosie] I've heard it's really good. - [David] So all of this
together is a sentence. This is definitely a sentence We need to find a store that
sells the new Willamette cold brew coffee ice cream. Like, indisputably, that is a sentence. We have our subject, we. We have our verb, need,
and then the object of need is to find a store
that sells the new Willamette cold brew coffee ice cream. But, we're focusing on
this yellow part here, so that is substituting in for a store, that's what that relative
pronoun is representing. And then we have that sells the new, so we've got store that sells, right? So that is our subject here. Sells is the verb The new Willamette cold
brew coffee ice cream is the object of sells, and
everything in yellow here, all this yellow text,
is our relative clause. It cannot stand on its own as a sentence. You could not just have that
sells the new Willamette cold brew coffee ice cream. On its own, that doesn't work
because the very presence of this relative pronoun
requires more stuff to go on. Well, let's make things a
little more complicated. The woman who always wore a red hat came into the cafe every Sunday. So this sentence contains
a relative clause right there in the middle of it, who always wore a red hat. All right, so we've
got who substituting in for the woman and that's the subject of the verb phrase wore
a red hat, but again, this could not be a sentence on its own. Now the challenge here
is when you see sentences like this in the wild,
then you see sentences like these in the exercises,
they're not gonna be differentiated for your convenience with two different colors, so
you have to be very careful to figure out where this
dependent clause begins and ends. So you can parse, so you can
make sense of this sentence, in order to make it work. So really what is this
sentence actually saying, just on a base level? - [Rosie] The woman came into the cafe. - [David] Right, and so everything
else, this every Sunday, or who always wore a red
had, that is kinda extra, and so it's your job as a
writer, reader and editor of text, as someone who is working with the English
language, to puzzle it out and separate the sentence
into its components. - [Rosie] Right, this is a
who always wore a red hat is a description of the woman. - [David] Right. - [Rosie] Then we move on
to the verb, the action of the sentence, what is she
doing, she came into the cafe, so that's not part of
that relative clause. The relative clause is just,
in this case, providing some description of the woman. - [David] Right, so use
your best sense because yes, it is possible that the
red hat could be the thing that comes into the cafe every Sunday, but it's more likely
that that hat is attached to the woman that was referenced earlier. - [Rosie] Right. - [David] So, that is a relative clause. You can learn anything. David out. - [Rosie] Rosie out.