who, which, that, where
A relative clause gives extra information about a noun (a person, thing, or place).
It tells us which person, which thing, or which place we are talking about.
💬 Example:
That’s the man who teaches English.
→ “who teaches English” tells us which man.
So, instead of two sentences:
That man is my teacher. He teaches English.
You can join them:
That’s the man who teaches English.
Relative Pronouns
| Relative Pronoun | Used for | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| who | people 👩🏫 | She’s the woman who works in the office. | → “who” = the woman |
| which | things 🧁 | This is the cake which I made yesterday. | → “which” = the cake |
| that | people and things 🙋♂️📱 | He’s the man that lives next door. It’s the phone that I bought. | → “that” = who / which |
| where | places 🏫 | That’s the school where I studied. | → “where” = in that place |
💡 Note:
In speaking, we often use that instead of who or which — it’s more common and informal.
How to Form a Relative Clause
| Step | Example |
|---|---|
| 1️⃣ Start with two simple sentences. | This is the girl. She lives next door. |
| 2️⃣ Replace the repeated word (she → who). | This is the girl who lives next door. |
✅ Final sentence:
This is the girl who lives next door.
Examples

💡Remember
- Don’t use a subject after who, which, or that.
❌ This is the woman who she works here.
✅ This is the woman who works here. - That can often replace who or which, especially in speech:
✅ It’s the restaurant that I like best.
Let’s Practice
Practice 1
Practice 2
Practice 2
Speaking
Practice 1
Practice 2
[…] Introduction to Relative clauses […]