Relative Clauses: Defining and Non-Defining
Relative clauses are used to give additional information about a noun without starting a new sentence. They are essential for writing complex sentences in the BAC exam.
Defining Relative Clauses:
Provide essential information needed to identify the person or thing. No commas used. Exemple: “The student who studies regularly will succeed.”
- Who/that: for people (subject). Ex: “The teacher who helped me is kind.”
- Which/that: for things (subject/object). Ex: “The book which I read is interesting.”
- Whom: for people (object, formal). Ex: “The man whom you met is my uncle.”
- Whose: for possession. Ex: “The student whose father is a doctor is clever.”
- Where/When/Why: for place/time/reason. Ex: “The school where I studied is old.”
Non-Defining Relative Clauses:
Provide extra, non-essential information. Uses commas. Exemple: “My brother, who lives in Algiers, is an engineer.”
Key difference: In defining clauses, “that” can replace who/which. In non-defining clauses, “that” cannot be used.
BAC Example 2021:
“Algeria, which gained independence in 1962, has a rich cultural heritage.” – Non-defining relative clause giving extra information about Algeria.
BAC Example 2023:
“The candidates whose applications were complete were invited for an interview.” – Defining relative clause with “whose”.
Similar Lessons
📍 دروس مشابهة
- English — Giving Directions: Vocabulary and Dialogues — 2nd Year Middle School — Algerian Curriculum
- English – Quantifiers: Some, Any, Much, Many, A lot of – 1st Year – Literary Stream
- English — Past Tenses: Past Simple, Past Continuous, Past Perfect — 1st Year Secondary
مدونة التربية و التعليم في الجزائر – دروس، فروض، نتائج امتحانات مدونة التربية والتعليم في الجزائر | تحضير الدروس، فروض واختبارات، نتائج البكالوريا وBEM، مسابقات التوظيف، والتوجيه المدرسي للطلاب وأولياء الأمور.