1.2.11
Relative & Demonstrative Pronouns
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Lexis - Relative and Demonstrative Pronouns
Relative pronouns link the noun to a clause. Demonstrative pronouns direct attention towards something.

Relative pronouns
- Relative pronouns link the noun to a clause.
- Relative pronouns include (but are not limited to) who, what, where.

Relative pronouns - examples
- Izzy, who played the saxophone, had a gig tonight.
- The pronoun 'who' links Izzy to the clause.
- Cigarettes, which are bad for your health, are very expensive.
- The pronoun 'which' links cigarettes to the clause.
- The book, when it was published, was very successful.
- The pronoun 'when' links the book to the clause.

Demonstrative pronouns
- Demonstrative pronouns direct attention towards something.

Demonstrative pronouns - examples
- This is the car Jess owns.
- The pronoun 'this' draws attention to the car.
- Those boys are very good at football.
- The pronoun 'those' draws attention to the boys.
- These students are the brightest in the class.
1Language Levels
1.1Assessment Objectives
1.2Lexis
1.2.1Introduction1.2.2Common, Proper, Abstract & Concrete Nouns1.2.3Collective Nouns1.2.4Adjectives1.2.5Main, Auxiliary & Copular Verbs1.2.6Dynamic & Stative Verbs1.2.7Transitive, Intransitive, Active & Passive Verbs1.2.8Mood of Verbs1.2.9Adverbs1.2.10Personal, Possessive & Reflexive Pronouns1.2.11Relative & Demonstrative Pronouns1.2.12Determiners1.2.13Conjunctions1.2.14Synonyms, Antonyms & Phonological Features1.2.15End of Topic Test - Lexis
1.3Grammar
1.4Semantics & Pragmatics
1.5Discourse Structure, Graphology & Orthography
2Language, The Individual & Society
2.1Children’s Language Development
2.2Children's Language Development - Theories
2.3Literacy Development: Reading
3Language Diversity & Change
3.1The Importance of Gendered Language
3.2Social Groups
3.3Occupational Groups
3.4Accents & Dialects
3.5Language Change
Jump to other topics
1Language Levels
1.1Assessment Objectives
1.2Lexis
1.2.1Introduction1.2.2Common, Proper, Abstract & Concrete Nouns1.2.3Collective Nouns1.2.4Adjectives1.2.5Main, Auxiliary & Copular Verbs1.2.6Dynamic & Stative Verbs1.2.7Transitive, Intransitive, Active & Passive Verbs1.2.8Mood of Verbs1.2.9Adverbs1.2.10Personal, Possessive & Reflexive Pronouns1.2.11Relative & Demonstrative Pronouns1.2.12Determiners1.2.13Conjunctions1.2.14Synonyms, Antonyms & Phonological Features1.2.15End of Topic Test - Lexis
1.3Grammar
1.4Semantics & Pragmatics
1.5Discourse Structure, Graphology & Orthography
2Language, The Individual & Society
2.1Children’s Language Development
2.2Children's Language Development - Theories
2.3Literacy Development: Reading
3Language Diversity & Change
3.1The Importance of Gendered Language
3.2Social Groups
3.3Occupational Groups
3.4Accents & Dialects
3.5Language Change
Practice questions on Relative & Demonstrative Pronouns
Can you answer these? Test yourself with free interactive practice on Seneca — used by over 10 million students.
- 1Which sentences contain demonstrative pronouns?True / false
- 2
- 3
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