Possessive Adjectives Explained
Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1
In this article, Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1 learners study possessive adjectives.
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Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1
In this article, Beginner to Elementary Grammar A1 learners study possessive adjectives.
Intermediate Grammar B1
In this article, Intermediate Grammar B1 learners study relative clauses.
You will learn how to use relative clauses in clear English sentences.
The key question is: How can I use relative clauses correctly without guessing?
The main rule to remember is: A main clause can stand alone. A dependent clause needs another clause to complete the sentence.
You will study examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing.
By the end, you should be able to recognize relative clauses, explain the rule, and use it in your own examples.
Clauses are groups of words with a subject and verb. They can act like nouns, adjectives, or adverbs, and they help writers combine ideas precisely.
Relative Clauses Explained looks specifically at relative clauses. At this level, the goal is to explain relationships between ideas and avoid common intermediate mistakes.
As you read, keep one question in mind: How can I use relative clauses correctly without guessing? This question will help you connect the rule to meaning instead of memorizing the form alone.
You will see examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing, then practice the topic through corrections, short tasks, and a final review.
This section breaks relative clauses into practical rules. Read each rule, study the examples, and notice how the form supports the meaning.
Relative clauses describe nouns and often begin with who, which, that, whose, where, or when.
Noun clauses act like nouns and can be subjects, objects, or complements.
Adverb clauses show time, reason, condition, contrast, purpose, or result.
The examples below focus on relative clauses. Read the sentence, then read the note so you can see why the grammar choice works.
| Use | Example | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Core pattern | The woman who called is my aunt. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Natural use | The book that I bought is useful. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Meaning check | This is the city where I was born. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Daily English | What she said was important. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Careful writing | I know that he is honest. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Question form | The question is whether we can finish. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Formal style | Call me when you arrive. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
| Review sentence | I stayed home because I was tired. | This example connects to relative clauses and shows examples of relative clauses in everyday reading and writing. |
Relative clauses becomes more useful when it appears inside connected writing, not only in isolated examples. Try using the topic in a short message, a description, a comparison, or an explanation.
A strong example should answer the article question: How can I use relative clauses correctly without guessing? If your sentence answers that question, the grammar is doing real work.
These mistakes show what can go wrong with relative clauses. Compare the wrong sentence, the correction, and the reason before you write your own examples.
| Common Mistake | Correction | Why |
|---|---|---|
| The man which called is here. | The man who called is here. | Use who for people in relative clauses. |
| I know what does she want. | I know what she wants. | Use statement word order in noun clauses. |
| Although it was late. We continued. | Although it was late, we continued. | A dependent clause needs a main clause. |
Use these exercises after reading the article. They are designed around relative clauses, so each task should help you use the topic in a specific way.
Write a short paragraph of five to seven sentences that includes relative clauses. After writing, highlight the grammar pattern and explain how it answers this question: How can I use relative clauses correctly without guessing?
Answer these questions to check whether you can recognize and use relative clauses without relying only on memory.
This topic is useful because it helps you make a specific grammar choice instead of relying on translation or habit.
Before you leave this article, check whether you can answer this question clearly: How can I use relative clauses correctly without guessing?
If the answer feels automatic, try using relative clauses in a new sentence about your own life, work, studies, or opinions.
Next step: Write three new sentences with relative clauses and check the form carefully.