寻找适合你的 英语 教师…
Muhammed Qasim
When not to use "that"? Could somebody please explain why would using that in the below sentence make it wrong: Original Sentence: - I am writing to apologise for the meeting I missed on October 20th about development plans for the company. Sentence with that: - I am writing to apologise for the meeting THAT I missed on October 20th about development plans for the company.
2020年8月28日 23:09
回答 · 7
2
Using 'that' does not make the sentence incorrect. The sentence "I am writing to apologise for the meeting THAT I missed on October 20th about development plans for the company" is OK. You can include the relative pronoun 'that' if you wish, but it is not necessary. You asked "When not to use that?". Here's an answer: You can omit the relative pronoun (that, who, which) when it refers to the OBJECT of the clause; you cannot omit the relative pronoun when it refers to the subject of the clause. For example: "I apologise about the meeting that I missed on October 20th." or "I apologise about the meeting I missed on October 20th." The relative clause here is "the meeting that I missed". In this clause, 'I' am the subject and 'the meeting' is the OBJECT. The relative pronoun 'that' therefore refers to the object and can be left out: it is fine to say this sentence either with or without 'that'. Native speakers tend to omit the 'that', especially in speaking and informal writing. "I missed the meeting that was held on October 20th." In this sentence, the relative clause is "the meeting that was held on October 20th". In this clause, the meeting is the grammatical SUBJECT, so the relative pronoun 'that' is essential. You cannot omit it. I hope that makes sense.
2020年8月29日
1
I cannot explain why including it would be incorrect. . As the others comment, it is common to omit it, even when strictly required, in speech, but I am unsure of any rule that says it can't be used as you have used it. . I am prepared to be wrong.
2020年8月29日
I agree with Brandon. Both are common. (This makes Spanish-speakers crazy because in Spanish you can't omit the "that". )
2020年8月29日
Thanks, Brandon, for helping me.
2020年8月28日
Both sentences are correct. Sometimes English speakers tend to omit “that” when speaking but both phrases are grammatically correct.
2020年8月28日
显示更多
还未找到你的答案吗?
把你的问题写下来,让母语人士来帮助你!

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to learn a language from the comfort of your own home. Browse our selection of experienced language tutors and enroll in your first lesson now!