Relative Pronouns
[B1] English Relative Pronouns: Learn how to connect clauses using who, whom, whose, which, and that. This module explains relative clauses, pronoun functions, and usage with clear examples.
Relative pronouns
Relative pronouns introduce a relative clause that gives more information about a noun or pronoun. They connect the clause to its antecedent, so the listener knows exactly which person, thing, place, or time you mean. In English, relative clauses can be defining meaning needed to identify the noun or non-defining extra information. Choosing the correct relative pronoun depends mainly on what you refer to and the role the pronoun plays inside the relative clause.
Choose the best general description of a relative pronoun.
Main forms
The core English relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, and that. Who and whom refer to people, which refers to things and sometimes animals, whose shows possession, and that can refer to people or things in defining relative clauses. There are also relative words like where, when, and why that work like relative pronouns for place, time, and reason.
Word/Phrase | Definition | Example |
|---|---|---|
Which relative pronoun normally refers to people as the subject of the relative clause?
Defining clauses
Defining relative clauses identify which specific person or thing you mean, so they are essential to the meaning of the sentence. They are not separated by commas. In defining clauses, that is very common, and who or which are also possible depending on the antecedent. If the relative pronoun is the object of the clause, it can often be omitted in defining clauses.
Which sentence is an example of a defining relative clause?
Non-defining clauses
Non-defining relative clauses add extra information that is not needed to identify the noun. They are set off by commas, and in speech they are usually marked by a pause. In non-defining clauses, you generally use who, whom, whose, or which, and you do not use that. You also do not omit the relative pronoun in non-defining clauses.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which sentence correctly shows a non-defining relative clause?
Subject vs object
The relative pronoun can function as the subject or the object inside the relative clause. If it is the subject, it cannot be omitted. If it is the object, it is often omitted in defining clauses, especially in speech and informal writing. Understanding the pronounโs role helps you choose between who and whom and helps you decide whether omission is possible.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which sentence shows a relative pronoun used as the subject (so it cannot be omitted)?
Who vs whom
Who is used when the relative pronoun is the subject of the relative clause, while whom is used when it is the object, especially in formal style. In everyday English, whom is often replaced by who, except after a preposition in careful writing. In very informal speech, many speakers avoid whom entirely and restructure the sentence if needed.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which sentence uses 'whom' correctly in a formal context?
Whose possession
Whose expresses possession and can refer to people, animals, and things. It links the antecedent to something that belongs to it, such as a body part, family member, property, or feature. Whose works in both defining and non-defining clauses and is often the most natural choice even when referring to things. It is followed by a noun phrase, not a complete clause.
Which sentence correctly uses 'whose' to show possession?
That vs which
That and which can both refer to things in defining relative clauses, but their distribution differs by style and punctuation. In American English, many writers prefer that for defining clauses and which for non-defining clauses. In British English, which is common in defining clauses as well, especially in more formal writing. Regardless of variety, which is the normal choice for non-defining clauses, and that is not used there.
Region | Word | Regional Definition |
|---|---|---|
๐บ๐ธAmerican English | ||
๐บ๐ธAmerican English | ||
๐ฌ๐งBritish English | ||
In American English which choice is commonly preferred for defining clauses about things?
Prepositions
With relative clauses, prepositions can appear at the end of the clause or before the relative pronoun. End-position prepositions are common and natural in conversation. Fronted prepositions are more formal and usually require whom for people and which for things. If the preposition is fronted, you cannot omit the relative pronoun.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Choose the sentence with a fronted preposition (more formal).
Relative adverbs
Where, when, and why introduce relative clauses with meanings of place, time, and reason. They often replace patterns like in which, on which, or for which, and they are especially common in speech and general writing. They are most natural after nouns like place, day, time, and reason. In many cases, why can be omitted after reason without changing the meaning.
Rule | Example |
|---|---|
Which relative adverb replaces 'in which' after a place noun?


















