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Luyện ngữ pháp English Grammar in Use (Unit 94: Relative clauses 3: whose/whom/where)


A

Whose

We use whose in relative clauses instead of his/her/their:
we helped some people - their car had broken down
→ We helped some people whose car had broken down.

 

We use whose mostly for people:
  • A widow is a woman whose husband is dead. (her husband is dead)
  • What's the name of the man whose car you borrowed? (you borrowed his car)
  • I met someone whose brother I went to school with. (I went to school with his/her brother)

 

Compare who and whose:
  • I met a man who knows you. (he knows you)
  • I met a man whose sister knows you. (his sister knows you)
B

Whom

Whom is possible instead of who when it is the object of the verb in the relative clause (like the sentences in Unit 938):
  • George is a person whom I admire very much. (I admire him)

 

You can also use whom with a preposition (to whom / from whom / with whom etc.):
  • I like the people with whom I work. (I work with them)

 

Whom is a formal word and we do not often use it in this way. We usually prefer who or that, or nothing (see Unit 93). So we usually say:
  • ... a person who/that I admire a lot or ... a person I admire a lot
  • ... the people who/that I work with or ... the people I work with
C

Where

You can use where in a relative clause to talk about a place:
the restaurant - we had lunch there - it was near the airport
→ The restaurant where we had lunch was near the airport.

 

  • I recently went back to the town where I grew up.
    (or ... the town I grew up in or ... the town that I grew up in)
  • I would like to live in a place where there is plenty of sunshine.
D

We say:

the day / the year / the time etc. something happens or
that something happens

  • I can't meet you on Friday. That's the day (thatI'm going away.
  • The last time (thatI saw Anna, she looked great.
  • I haven't seen Jack and Helen since the year (thatthey got married.
E

We say:

the reason something happens or
that/whysomething happens

  • The reason I'm phoning is to ask your advice. (or The reason that I'm phoning / The reason why I'm phoning).


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