Adjective Clauses (Relative Clauses) are used when we want give more
information about people, things, places, locations, and time.
Whose, where, and when introduce adjective clauses about possession, location,
and time.
People whose jobs require frequent social contact have the most opportunity
to lie. (possession)
There’s no place in the world where people are completely honest all the time.
(location)
There has never been a time when some form of lying wasn’t a part of
everyday life. (time)
FIGURE IT OUT...
Fill in the blanks.
Look at the sentences showing formal and informal English usage when a
relative pronoun is the object of a preposition.
FORMAL: The participants in the study deceived many of the people with whom
they interacted.
INFORMAL: The participants in the study deceived many of the people who (or
that) they interacted with.
FORMAL: Money is a subject about which people are rarely honest.
INFORMAL: Money is a subject which (or that) people are rarely honest about.
FORMAL: The researcher from whom we received the survey is studying
attitudes about lying.
INFORMAL: The researcher who (or whom) we received the survey from is
studying attitudes about lying.
FORMAL: Most people save their biggest lies for the person to whom they are
closest.
INFORMAL: Most people save their biggest lies for the person who (or whom) they
are closest to.
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