A relative clause is a subordinate clause that provides additional information about a noun in a sentence, typically introduced by a relative pronoun such as "who," "whom," "whose," "which," or "that." For example, in the sentence "The book that I borrowed was fascinating," the relative clause "that I borrowed" describes the noun "book." Relative clauses help to clarify or specify which person or thing is being referred to. They can be essential (restrictive) or non-essential (non-restrictive), depending on whether the information is crucial to identifying the noun.
South Siberia
It is a south American bear.
yes he was james the first relitive
humans and monkeys/apes
no he was not a relitive of his was
a guessed date of the age of objects such as rocks
the living relitive of a shark is the stingray
well you called name your child after someone famouse our a relitive
relitive-age dating
he grew up on a relitive's farm in Kinderhook New York
That's called a 'fault line'.
Because relitive atomic masses are NEVER whole numbers.