RELATIVE
CLAUSE
WHERE
TO PUT THE PREPOSTITION IN A RELATIVE CLAUSE
There are often
prepositions in relative clauses, and the relative pronoun is the object
of the preposition. This means that the preposition can sometimes be
omitted.
- The preposition
is normally placed at the end of the relative clause:
Is that the man (who) you arrived with?
Do you know the girl (that) John is talking to?
- In formal or
written English, the preposition is often placed before the relative
pronoun, and in this case the pronoun cannot be omitted:
The person
with whom he is negotiating is the Chairman of a large company.
It is a society to which many important people belong.
However, this
is unusual in spoken English.
Examples:
- The jungle the
elephant lived in was full of strange
and unusual animals.
- He was very
fond of the mouse that
he lived with.
- The tree under
which they had their home was the largest
and oldest in the jungle.
- In the middle
of the jungle was a river that
all the animals went to every day.
- It was the stream
in
which the elephant and the mouse preferred to swim.