In this English grammar lesson, It explains defining relative clauses, also known as restrictive relative clauses. It also gives an explanation of the following relative pronouns: "who", "whom", "which", "that" and "whose" and which ones to use for people, things and animals. You will also learn the grammar rules for using these pronouns as a subject or ..(more, see this video)
By explaining grammatical rules that make up the English language, this book helps the reader in understanding the correct use of various parts of a sentence to avoid errors and in increasing his/her vocabulary and comprehension skills.
This book grasps the details of English grammar and explains why each rule is significant, teaches the correct usage of the same and also cites examples by using the rule in sentences. The book covers the topics of Nouns, Pronouns, Adjectives, Verbs, Adverbs, Tenses, Vowels, Synonyms, Antonyms, Idioms & Phrases and more. At the end of each topic it tests the readers with little exercises.
First published in 2003, this is a study of the syntactic behaviour of personal pronoun subjects and the indefinite pronoun man, in Old English. It focuses on differences in word order as compared to full noun phrases. In generative work on Old English, noun phrases have usually divided into two categories: 'nominal' and 'pronominal'. The latter category has typically been restricted to personal pronouns, but despite striking similarities to the behaviour of nominals there has been good reason to believe that man should be grouped with personal pronouns. This book explores investigations carried out in conjunction with the aid of the Toronto Corpus, which confirmed this hypothesis.