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The 2 nd one is correct. The 2 nd main verb “has” in the subordinate clause must agree with the relative pronoun “who” in number (singular in this case) and person (3 rd person in this case).
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Hello, Chris, this clause would be an adjective clause , right? in fact, one should distinguish between relative clauses and adjective clauses , which are more precisely termed supplementive adjective clauses and represent only a special case of
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Gleb Chebrikoff, thank you for your response. It's really informative and interesting--I agree with your analysis of "tell." 3. (d; intr., tr.) ('to inform') to — about, of (he didn't want to — about the incident; — me
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The sentence is very awkward in my opinion. Which is a relative pronoun. The underlined phrase refers to the "that" clause. I would say: I know that it fell and that's why / therefore / consequently it has to be taken to a vet. CB
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Good evening, Chris, these are thought-provoking questions you have asked, and here is my opinion backed up by data from authoritative sources. 1. The possibility of tell filling the slot of talk in the example sentence seems questionable at
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After talking it out with some fellow teachers and looking some terms up...we're still a little unsure about our conclusions. Any clarifications would be greatly appreciated! "I'm going to talk about Ichiro Suzuki." (Starting out
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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minofachino
5 days ago 10:30 am
Verbs, Clauses, Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, Writing, Sentences, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Speeches, Intransitive Verbs, Pronoun Clauses, Transitive Verbs
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Hi Cute572 The word "that" is a relative pronoun in your sentence. It refers back to "report" and it introduces a defining relative clause . The word "he" is the subject of the clause.
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Hi chattt, Welcome to English Forums. Thanks for joining us. Sorry your post slipped thru the cracks. Everything you say is correct. When you ask if the sentence is "true," do you mean "is it correct?" Yes, it's correct.
Basic English Vocabulary Questions
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avangi
13 days ago
Nouns, Pronouns, Plurals, Prepositions, Clauses, Sentences, Writing, Adjectives, Apologies, Numbers, Relative Pronouns
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What am I missing here? You are missing the rule that governs these cases! The function of the antecedent in the main clause is irrelevant. Choose the case of the relative pronoun ( who / whom ) on the basis of its function in the subordinate
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Hello,
How can we combine two sentences with a relative pronoun clause?
Await him
We don't know who he is
Something like " Await him who we don't know who he is"?
Thanks for help.
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