Here's a list of all the relative clause exercises on the site. Web an worksheet that reinforces learning about relative clauses with answers provided. Web complete the relative clauses. They start with a relative pronoun, for example: → where is the woman ?
In some of the sentences, you can leave off the relative pronoun. Web an worksheet that reinforces learning about relative clauses with answers provided. Web complete the relative clauses. Relative clauses give extra information about a noun.
→ where is the woman ? A ws for your students to revise the relative pronouns. We don’t need a relative pronoun, because the first word in the relative clause is not a verb.
RELATIVE CLAUSES / WHOWHICHWHERETHAT ESL worksheet by lady_gargara
→ where is the woman ? Which or that or who? Defining relative clauses 1 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 2 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 3 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 4 ( in pdf here) go to the main relative clauses explanation page here. They start with a relative pronoun, for example: We don’t need a relative pronoun, because the first word in the relative clause is not a verb.
A ws for your students to revise the relative pronouns. In some of the sentences, you can leave off the relative pronoun. They start with a relative pronoun, for example:
We Can Use Who/That Or Whom, Though.
Starts by giving a description of what the grammatical target looks like, before working through increasingly complex levels of difficulty to support children internalising and using the grammar skill independently. A ws for your students to revise the relative pronouns. We don’t need a relative pronoun, because the first word in the relative clause is not a verb. Web an worksheet that reinforces learning about relative clauses with answers provided.
This Car Belongs To A Woman.
Defining relative clauses 1 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 2 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 3 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 4 ( in pdf here) go to the main relative clauses explanation page here. They start with a relative pronoun, for example: Relative clauses give extra information about a noun. Who, which, where, when, whose, that.
Web Complete The Relative Clauses.
In some of the sentences, you can leave off the relative pronoun. A worksheet with multiple exercises about relative clauses. Here's a list of all the relative clause exercises on the site. → where is the woman ?
Which Or That Or Who?
We don’t need a relative pronoun, because the first word in the relative clause is not a verb. A worksheet with multiple exercises about relative clauses. We can use who/that or whom, though. Web complete the relative clauses. Defining relative clauses 1 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 2 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 3 ( in pdf here) defining relative clauses 4 ( in pdf here) go to the main relative clauses explanation page here.