Learn English Grammar: The Adjective Clause (Relative Clause)
The lesson that you are about to watch is about adjective clauses, of which there are two in this sentence. Can you see them? In some grammar books, you may see the adjective clause called the “relative clause“. Don’t get confused -- they are the same thing. In this lesson, you will learn the difference between the two types of adjective clauses -- the defining adjective clause, and the modifying adjective clause. I’ll also answer a common question people have about clauses: “Should I use a comma or not?“. After this lesson, you will be able to spot adjective clauses of all forms and use them to take your English writing and speaking to the next level.
Test your understanding with the quiz:
Watch Adam’s series on clauses!
Dependent Clauses
Noun Clauses
Adverb Clauses
TRANSCRIPT
Hi. Welcome back to . I’m Adam. In today’s lesson we’re going to look at the adjective clause. Now, this is a dependent clause, and if you’re not sure what the difference between dependent or independent clause, you can check out my video about the independent clause and my introduction video to dependent clauses. In this lesson we’re going to dive a little bit deeper into this particular dependent clause, the adjective clause. Now, some of you will have grammar... Different grammar books, and some of you will see this called the relative clause. Relative clause, adjective clause, same thing. Different books like to call them different things. Okay? So we’re going to look at this.
Now, the first thing to remember about an adjective clause before we look at the actual structure of it, the full clause is essentially an adjective. Although it’s a clause, means it has a subject, and a verb, and maybe some modifiers - the whole piece, the whole clause together works like an adjective. So, because it works like an adjective: What does that mean? It means that it’s giving you some information about a noun somewhere in the sentence. You could have many nouns in a sentence, you could have many adjective clauses in a sentence. There’s no limit to how many you can have, although try not to have too many in one sentence because the sentence becomes very bulky, not a very good sentence.
So let’s get right into it. First of all, we have two types of adjective clause. We have a defining adjective clause, which means that it’s basically pointing to the noun and telling you something necessary about the noun. Without the adjective clause, the noun is incomplete. I don’t know what it is, I don’t know what it’s doing, etc. The second adjective clause is the modifying, means it is not necessary but we put it in to give a little bit of extra information about the noun. Okay? So it’s like an adjective that just gives you a little bit more description about the noun.
Two things to remember: The defining noun. Now, one of the biggest questions about adjective clauses is: Do I use a comma or do I not use a comma? For defining adjective clauses, no comma. For modifying, like the extra information, the ones that you could actually take out and the sentence is still okay, use a comma. We’re going to look at examples and understand this more.
Now, another thing to know about adjective clauses: They all begin with a relative pronoun. Okay? A relative pronoun. This is basically the conjunction of the clause. It is what begins the clause. Now, some of these can be also the subject of the clause, which means it will agree with the verb; some of them cannot. So these three... Whoa, sorry. “That“, “which“, and “who“ can be both the conjunction and the subject. These ones: “whom“, “whose“, “when“, “where“, and “why“ cannot be the subject of the clause; only the relative pronoun, only the conjunction of the clause. Now, in many cases, “that“ can also be removed, but we’re going to look at that separately.
So, let’s look at some examples to get an idea. “The man lives next door.“ So here we have an independent clause. Independent clause means it’s a complete idea, it stands by itself as a sentence, it doesn’t really need anything else. But the problem is “the man“. Which man? That man, that man, the man across the street? I don’t know. So this sentence, although it’s grammatically complete, is technically, in terms of meaning, incomplete because I don’t know who this man is. I need to identify him. So you can think of defining or identifying. Okay? I want to point specifically to one man because I have “the man“. I’m looking at somebody specific.
So here’s one way we can do it: “The man who lives next door“-“who lives next door“-“is a doctor“. Okay? So, again, I still have my independent clause: “The man is a doctor“, but now I have my adjective, my identifying adjective clause telling me who the man is.
1 view
53
18
1 month ago 00:03:02 1
Milk & Cookies | Holiday Song for Kids | Rhymington Square
1 month ago 00:02:36 5
Jingle Bells | Christmas Song | Super Simple Songs
1 month ago 00:02:36 1
Five Little Elves | Christmas Song For Kids | Super Simple Songs
1 month ago 00:04:18 1
Real Life Elementary Episode 1.
1 month ago 00:03:31 1
The Hobbies Song for Kids | What Do You Like to Do? | Fun Kids English
1 month ago 00:00:22 1
Do it! Other ways to say Daily English speaking practice English conversation
2 months ago 00:40:19 1
IELTS Listening Practice | Listening for English Learners | English Listening 1 ✔
2 months ago 00:05:13 1
Bienvenue à Nice | Easy French 2
2 months ago 00:01:41 2
Trick Or Treat | Give Me Something Good To Eat | Halloween Song | Super Simple Songs
2 months ago 00:01:32 1
The Trader, Death and You | English Trailer
2 months ago 01:34:18 1
Walking Thunder | Full Movie | John Denver | James Read | David Tom
2 months ago 00:14:06 1
How to Paraphrase | Tips & Practice | English Writing Skills
2 months ago 00:05:59 1
Flutter Disk Space
2 months ago 00:30:51 1
Theodore Roosevelt and the American Century | Historical Documentary | Lucasfilm
2 months ago 00:13:56 1
Dino the Curious Baby Dinosaur - English Stories for Children 25 Learn English
2 months ago 00:19:55 1
Nepal’s Mad Honey That Causes Hallucinations (They climb to go insane)
2 months ago 00:01:00 1
Английский для всех #learnenglish #music #переводы #английский #lyrics #english
2 months ago 00:14:17 1
100 Easy Italian Phrases for Beginners | Italian Lesson
2 months ago 00:04:16 1
BTS - Come Back Home (remake) live at 4th Muster 2018 [ENG SUB] [Full HD]
2 months ago 00:06:26 1
50+ Useful Conversation Phrases to React in a Dialogue Like a Russian | Super Easy Russian 15
2 months ago 00:03:03 1
Numbers Vocabulary | How to Say Numbers in English | English Pronunciation
2 months ago 00:15:16 1
Normal English VS Native English
2 months ago 11:54:56 1
Daily English Conversation Practice || Improve English Speaking Skills || Level-1- American English