Exercise 37 : Relative Clauses
1.
The last record which produced by this company
became a gold record
2.
Checking
accounts that require a minimum balance are very common now
3.
The professor whose you spoke yesterday is not here
today
4.
Jhon whose grades are the highest in the school
has received a scholarship
5.
Felipe bought a camera that has three lenses
6.
Frank is the man who we are going to nominate
frank for the office of treasurer
7.
The doctor is with a patient whose leg was
broken in an accident
8.
Jane is the woman who is going to china year
9.
Janet wants a typewriter whose self corrects
10.
This book that I found last week contains some
use full information
11.
Mr .Bryant’s whose team hast lost the game looks
very sad
12.
James wrote an article whose indicated that
disliked the president
13.
The director of the program was graduated from Harvard
university is planning to retire year
14.
This is the book that I have been looking for
all year
15.
William whose brother is a lawyer wants to
become a judge
Exercise 38 : Relative Clauses Reductions
1.
George is the man chosen to represent the committee
at the convention
2.
All of the money accepted has already been
releases
3.
The prepare on the table belong to Patricia
4.
The man brought to the police station confessed
to the crime
5.
The girl drinkin coffee is Mary Allen
6.
Jhon’s wife a professor has written several
papers on this subject
7.
The man talking to the policeman is my uncle
8.
The book on the top shelf is the one that I need
9.
The number of students have been counted is
quite high
10.
Leo Evans a doctor eat in this restaurant
everyday
Article Relative Clauses
Relative
clauses with whose
A relative clause with the relative
pronoun whose can be used to talk about something which belongs to a person or
an animal, or something or someone that is associated with a person, e.g.:
Is she the woman whose bag was
stolen?
Help is needed for families whose
homes were flooded.
That must be the cat whose tail got
cut off.
He had a sister whose name I’ve
forgotten.
She’s the friend whose brother went
to boarding school.
The relative pronoun whose can
sometimes be used to refer to countries, organizations or other nouns which
imply a group of people, e.g.:
I’d prefer to use a bank whose
services are reliable.
It was a small country whose
population was steadily rising.
But whose is not generally used to
talk about something belonging to or relating to a thing. For instance, an
example like:
She handed me a box whose lid was
damaged.
would sound less natural than, e.g.:
She handed me a box which had a
damaged lid.
The noun after whose can be the
subject or object of the verb in the relative clause, e.g.:
…a country whose population was
steadily rising (subject)
…a woman whose bag was stolen
(object)
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