Senin, 23 Juni 2014

TUGAS SOFTSKILL BAHASA INGGRIS BISNIS 2 # ( RELATIVE CLAUSE)

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EXERCISE 37 ( RELATIVE CLAUSES)

1.      The last record which was produced by this company became a gold record.
2.      Checking accounts which require a minimum balance are very common now.
3.      The professor to whom you spoke yesterday is not here today.
4.      John whose grades are the highest in the school has received a scholarship.
5.      Felipe bought a camera that has three lenses.
6.      Frank is the man whom we are going to nominate Frank for the office of treasurer.
7.      The doctor is with a patient whose leg was broken in an accident.
8.      Jane is the woman who jane is going to china next year.
9.      Janet wants a typewriter that self-corrects.
10.  This book that last week contains some useful information.
11.  Mr.Bryant whom team has lost the game looks very sad.
12.  James wrote an article whom indicated that he disliked the president.
13.  The director of the program who graduated from Harvard University is planning to retire next year.
14.  This is the book that I have been looking for this book all year.
15.  William whose brother is a lawyer wants to become a judge.


EXERCISE 38 (RELATIVE CLAUSES REDUCTION)

1.      George is the man chosen to represent the commite at the convention.
2.      All of the money accepted has already been released.
3.      The papers on the table belong to Patricia.
4.      The man brought to the police station confessed to the crime.
5.      The girl drinking coffe is Marry Allen.
6.      John’s wife professor, has written several papers on this subject.
7.      The man talking to the policeman is my uncle.
8.      The book on the top shelf is the one that I need.
9.      The number of students having been counted is quite high.
10.  Leo Evans a doctor, eats in this restaurant every day.


RELATIVE CLAUSE

1.      The relative pronouns:

Subject            : who, which, that
Object             : whom, who, which, that
Possesive         : whose, whose

We use who and whom for people, and which for things.
We use that for people or things.
We use relative pronouns to introduce relative clauses, which tell us more about people and things.

2.       Relative clauses to postmodify a noun 

We use relative clauses to postmodify a noun - to make clear which person or thing we are talking about. In these clauses we can have the relative pronoun who, which, whose or that

·         as subject (see Clauses Sentences and Phrases)

Isn’t that the woman who lives across the road from you?
The police said the accident that happened last night was unavoidable
The newspaper reported that the tiger which killed its keeper has been put down.


·         as object of a clause (see Clauses, Sentences and Phrases)

Have you seen those people who we met on holiday?
You shouldn’t believe everything that you read in the newspaper.
The house that we rented in London was fully furnished.
The food was definitely the thing which I enjoyed most about our holiday.

a.      Sometimes we use whom instead of who when the relative pronoun is the object:
Have you seen those people whom we met on holiday?

b.      When the relative pronoun is object of its clause we sometimes leave it out:
Have you seen those people we met on holiday?
You shouldn’t believe everything you read in the newspaper.
The house we rented in London was fully furnished.
The food was definitely the thing I enjoyed most about our holiday.


3.      Times and places

We also use when with times and where with places to make it clear which time or place we are talking about:

England won the world cup in 1996. It was the year when we got married.
I remember my twentieth birthday. It was the day when the tsunami happened.
Do you remember the place where we caught the train?
Stratford-upon-Avon is the town where Shakespeare was born.

but we can leave out the word when:
England won the world cup in 1996. It was the year we got married.
I remember my twentieth birthday. It was the day the tsunami happened.

SUMBER :