Relatives in CBSE Class 10 English Grammar: Relative Pronouns and Clauses Explained

Relatives in CBSE Class 10 English Grammar: Relative Pronouns and Clauses Explained

Relatives

Relatives

Relative Pronouns and Relative Clauses

Relative pronouns are words which are used to link two sentences or clauses that may have the same noun or pronoun. Relative pronouns are used to introduce relative clauses.

Rajani is the girl who escorted the Vice President to his seat.

Relative Pronoun

Relative Clause

This is the house that I bought.

Relative Pronoun

Relative Clause

Types of Relative Pronouns

  • Who
  • Whom
  • That
  • Which
  • Whose

Who

It is used to refer to the animate noun of the sentence. The noun in such cases is usually a person. The pronoun ‘who’ is used to refer to the doer of the action. In other words, it is used to refer to the subject.

Whom

It is used to refer to the animate noun of the sentence. The noun in such cases is usually a person. ‘Whom’ is used to refer to the person who receives the action. In other words, it is used to refer to the object.

That

It is used for referring to both animate and inanimate nouns.

Which

It is used to refer to inanimate nouns.

In most cases, ‘that’ and ‘which’ are interchangeable. However, in formal usage, both have specific uses. ‘That’ and ‘which’ are used when the accompanying clause is crucial to the sentence. Removal of ‘which’ would render the sentence incomplete.

• This is the boat that/which the fishermen found. This is the boat.

The pronoun ‘which’ can also be used to introduce a modifying clause that is not crucial to the sentence. It is separated from the rest of the sentence with the help of two commas. Removal of the clause will not affect any change in the meaning of the sentence.

• The notebook, which was kept on the table, was ripped to pieces by the pups. The notebook was ripped to pieces by the pups.

Whose

It is used to indicate possession by an animate noun or the pronoun.

Relative Adverbs

Some adverbs can function like relative pronouns.

  • When
  • Where
  • Why

When

It is used instead of the phrase ‘in/on which’.

Where

It is used instead of the phrase ’at/on which’.

Why

It is used to replace the phrase ‘for which’.

Relative Clauses

Relative clauses are those that are introduced by a relative pronoun.

Types of Relative Clauses

  • Restrictive relative clause
  • Non-restrictive relative clause

Restrictive relative clause: It is a clause which describes the preceding noun in a manner that distinguishes it from the rest of its kind. The clause is not separated from the rest of the sentence with commas.

Non-restrictive relative clause: It is a clause which is placed after the noun that is already defined. The clause only provides additional information which is not important to the sentence. It is separated from the rest of the sentence with the help of commas.

Subject Object Possessive
Animate (People) / Inanimate (things) Who / That Whom / That Whose / Of which