I was desperately hoping that my answer would be relative to the question.
I saw your relative point yesterday.
Somehow, bears are relative to cats and raccoons.
The word that is never a preposition. It is a relative pronoun, adjective, or adverb. Or, when it starts a sentence with a clause (e.g. That he is coming...), it is a conjunction.
The pronoun 'what' is an interrogative pronoun (introduces a question) and a relative pronoun (introduces a relative clause); for example:Question: What is your name?Relative clause: You can do what you want.The word 'what' is also and adjective: What movie did you see?The word 'what' is an interjection: What! That's a lot of money.
No. A clause is more than one word. Were is the past form of are. In this sentence -- The boy who we met yesterday is very strange. The clause - who we met yesterday - is a relative clause. It begins with the relative pronoun - who.
When the relative pronoun is the object of the sentence.
The pronouns in the sentence are:you, personal pronounthere, relative pronoun, subject of the relative clause (not Santa)Note: The word 'when' also introduces a clause. The word 'when' is an adverb that introduces an adverbial clause.
the question has a sentence with relative in it.
i wonder which individual is my relative
The relative pronoun in the sentence is 'who', which introduces the relative clause 'who left the keys in the car'. The word 'one' is also a pronoun, an indefinite pronoun.
The relative humidity is high, contributing to your discomfort in the heat. I discovered a distant relative living in Iceland. Your grade will be based on relative examination standards.
The word "Which" is a pronoun. However, depending on how it is used it in a sentence the word can vary between being an interrogative pronoun or a relative pronoun.
There is no such English word. There is Laments though:People who lose a relative or friend lament over their death.
There are no abstract nouns in the sentence.The words in the sentence are:we, a personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;trust, the verb;that, a relative pronoun, introduces the relative clause;you, a personal pronoun, subject of the relative clause;will be, the verb of the relative clause;there, adverb, modifies the verb 'will be'.Note: The word 'trust' can function as both a verb and a noun. The noun 'trust' is an abstract noun as a word for confidence in someone or something; a word for a concept.
"The birds that have the strongest talons are birds of prey such as falcons."The relative pronoun is 'that', which introduces the relative clause 'that have the strongest talons.' The relative clause gives information about its antecedent 'birds', the subject of the sentence.
The antecedent for the relative pronoun 'who' is Max.The pronoun 'who' introduces the relative clause 'who is from Switzerland'.The relative clause 'who is from Switzerland' provides information that 'relates' to the antecedent noun 'Max'.
Dan is my kin. kin means family member or relative.
The word that is never a preposition. It is a relative pronoun, adjective, or adverb. Or, when it starts a sentence with a clause (e.g. That he is coming...), it is a conjunction.
The pronoun 'what' is an interrogative pronoun (introduces a question) and a relative pronoun (introduces a relative clause); for example:Question: What is your name?Relative clause: You can do what you want.The word 'what' is also and adjective: What movie did you see?The word 'what' is an interjection: What! That's a lot of money.