Zoe
My grammar books say that the pronoun THAT should be used after superlatives in relative clauses or after only, first, second. I am wondering if I can use who or which in these sentences. 1. He was the most interesting person that/ /WHO/WHOM I have ever met. 2. It is the first house that/WHICH he bought.
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الإجابات · 11
1
"Who", "whom", and "that" all can serve as relative pronouns and can be used to introduce clauses that give additional information about whatever they refer to. Thus all the possibilities in #1 are correct. In #2, "that" and "which" are both grammatically correct but you should probably only use "which" in a situation where a selection (among) houses is referenced. For example: "Jim owns three houses. Two of them were given to him and he bought one of them. The first house he acquired is the one which he bought."
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Hello Zoe, to answer your question, no the pronoun 'that' cannot be used here because it is a relative pronoun that begins a relative clause. for example: 'The little boy, that was swimming in the lake, is my son.' I hope this helps
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1. He was the most interesting person (that) I have ever met. - optional 2. The person who stole my money, please confess. 3. To whom does this belong?
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you can always use which, where and others wh instead of that and vice versa
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Hi, If anybody wants to practice English, I can be your partner.
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