时间:2018-12-16 作者:英语课 分类:2015年VOA慢速英语(六)月


英语课

Everyday Grammar: Relative Pronouns 每日语法:关系代词


In this week’s episode of Everyday Grammar, we are going to discuss the relative pronouns who, that and which.


A relative pronoun relates to the noun it is describing. Relative pronouns introduce a relative clause. Think of relative clauses as long adjectives. Adjectives are words that describe nouns.


Let’s start with an example sentence:


The woman who called me yesterday was my mother.


In this sentence who is the relative pronoun, and who called me yesterday is the relative clause. The clause is describing the noun woman.


In general, the relative pronouns who, that, and which do one of two things:


1. They help identify the noun or


2. They help give more information about the noun.


In the example sentence, the clause “who called me yesterday” identifies the noun, in this case woman.


When a relative clause adds more information about the noun, the clause is surrounded by commas. Here is an example sentence:


My mother, who called me yesterday, says she is coming to visit me this summer.


Who is just one example of a relative pronoun that you can use when talking about a person. Let’s listen to a scene from the comedy film Bridesmaids for another example. In this scene, the main character Annie is telling her best friend that she has changed. Listen for the relative pronoun:


“Lillian, this is not the you that I know! The you that I know would have walked in here and rolled your eyes and thought that this was completely over the top, ridiculous, and stupid!”


The relative pronoun Annie used in the scene is that -- when she says “the you that I know.” In this sentence, that I know describes the noun you.


Both who and that can be used in relative clauses that describe a person. That can also be used to describe a thing. For example:


“The bike that I bought last week was stolen.” The relative clause "that I bought yesterday” describes the noun bike.


The relative pronoun which is also used to describe a thing.


Here is an example sentence using which.


“My bike, which I bought last week, was stolen.”


In this example, the relative clause “which I bought last week” adds more information about the noun bike. The clause is surrounded by commas.


Here are some general rules about commas and relative clauses:


--If the clause begins with the relative pronoun that, you do not need commas.


--If the clause begins with the relative pronoun which, you generally need commas.


--If the clause begins with the relative pronoun who, you need commas if the clause is adding additional information about the noun.


Here is an example sentence using the relative pronoun who, with and without commas.


1. My sister who lives in New York bought an apartment


2. My sister, who lives in New York, bought an apartment.


In the first sentence, the relative clause who lives in New York is identifying the noun sister. The speaker might have more than one sister. The clause “who lives in New York” is identifying which sister he or she is talking about.


In the second sentence, the same relative clause is adding additional information about the noun sister.


Sometimes, English speakers remove the relative pronoun altogether. Listen for the relative clauses in Shania Twain’s song You’re Still the One.


You're still the one


You're still the one that I love


The only one I dream of


You're still the one I kiss good night


In one line, she keeps the relative pronoun that. In the rest, she omits -- or removes -- the relative pronoun. If the relative pronouns that and who are followed by a noun or pronoun, they can be omitted. That makes the sentences “You’re still the one that I love” and “You’re still the one I love” both correct.


We can talk about other relative pronouns in another episode of Everyday Grammar. But for now, listen for the relative pronouns as we end this episode with the David Bowie song “The Man Who Sold the World.”


Words in This Story


relate - v. to show or make a connection between (two or more things)


identify - v. to show who someone is or what something is


surround - v. to be on every side of something



标签: VOA慢速英语
学英语单词
abdominoplasties
acropsylla (acropsylla) girshami
advanced capital
air pressure seal
argyrism
Balfour Downs
baroness thatcher of kestevens
bellydancing
big fishes
Carzol
chafing ring
chrome lemon
concentration direct reading
conditional bill
cone governer
cotton tissue
current attenuation
cursiveness
daqq-e patargan
diplomatic treaty
discharged bill
dock-yard
Drangar
drifting electron
electron beam vapor deposition method
eoxyuridine
excess flow test
extended security control
faburden
flexural wash-out
frost free season
fulfills
gained day
Geliloth
Getonia
Gymnogongrus Mart.
heredopathia atactica polyneuritiformis
hyperlucent lung
in a fume
insured's employment status
interpolating to halves
Jingle Bowels
kneejoints
lede
Linum pallescens
longitudinal compressive force
macadamia-nut
matriline
maximum-likelihood demodulator
Mesothelimon
mnimh
monsoonlike
Morada Nova de Minas
multiple fibroepithelial hyperplasia
naddis
nangkat
naval tactical data system
nonreturn-to-zero indicating
OLE container
on special offer
oxidative decarboxylase
paeohyphomycosis
peace be with you
petrodrill bearing
photocatalysis
physical ton
phytohormone
Piankashaws
plant crops
positive criticism
preferential stock
proselytesses
pseudodominant
publicized
push-wainling
Queen Elizabeth II
rapes
rearling
refusell
rig site
rough-plane
sagittocysts
sing from the same hymn sheet
spike hammer
spinal cord membrane
sure as a gun
Tambora, Gunung
tapping old workings
text finish
the Alleghenies
total stocks issued
transfer of economic crisis
treadle stud
tricyclopentadienyl-actinium
trodax
trumpeter
undigest
vortex flowmeter
wing spread
Xiajuxu
yellow - green algae