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Ryota
I looked into the word “relative” to investigate how to use it in English grammar.
The definition in the dictionary says:
(Grammar) denoting a pronoun, determiner, or adverb that refers to an expressed or implied antecedent and attaches a subordinate clause to it
I know there is relative pronouns and relative adverb but I didn’t quite understand whether relative could denote determiners. Is there any example of a sentence in that case?
Jan 19, 2024 4:37 PM
Answers · 4
2
"That" can be a relative pronoun or a demonstrative determiner:
He is the boy that goes to my school.
That boy goes to my school.
January 19, 2024
1
Many determiners can refer to something previously mentioned:
demonstrative: this, that, those, these
quatitative: some, a few, many, a little, little, few, none
possessive: my, your, his, her, its, our, their, whose
("whose" can be used as a determiner, as in
"Whose woods these are, I think I know.")
If there is one for which you want an example, let me know.
January 19, 2024
Example:
Person #1: “You know, you shouldn’t be smoking a pack a day (cigarettes), especially if you’re also a heavy drinker,”
Person #2: “Eh, it’s all relative.”
“Relative” meaning, the answer can vary depending on the perspective of the person you are speaking to.
0:58
January 20, 2024
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Ryota
Language Skills
English, Japanese
Learning Language
English
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