In Grammar 9-1 and 9-2 we saw many examples of relative clauses. However, most of them reflected one type of clause: Defining Adjective Clause. We also have Non-Defining Adjective Clauses. In this lesson, we’ll look at each one and see what the differences are.

A Defining Adjective Clause is a necessary part of a sentence, as it defines which noun the speaker is referring to.

  • The man who sat down was Mike. (Defining Adjective Clause)

In this sentence, you can't omit "who sat down." It defines which man.

A Non-Defining Adjective Clause is extra information in a sentence. The noun the speaker is referring to is clear, so the information is not necessary for the meaning of the sentence.

  • The man, who I had never met before, was looking at me strangely. ( Non-Defining Adjective Clause).

In this sentence, you can omit "who I had never met before." It does not define which man, so it is simply extra information.

Relative Pronouns Used

Defining Adjective Clauses

For people

  • who
  • that
  • X

For things

  • which
  • that
  • X

Non-Defining Adjective Clauses

For people

  • who

For things

  • which

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Exercise

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