Adjective Clauses with Prepositions - Blogger
thessgc.blogspot.com › 2009 › 08Adjective Clauses with Prepositions. The relative pronouns who (m), that, which, and whose + noun can be used as object of prepositions in adjective clauses. Example: - He´s the teacher to whom they were talking. (very formal) - He´s the teacher whom they were talking to. - He´s the teacher that they were talking to.
Adjective Clauses with Prepositions - More ... - Coursera
www.coursera.org › lecture › adjective-clausesIn the first part, teacher and her mean the same thing. And to is the preposition. Now, to put the sentences as one adjective clause sentence to her needs to move right after teacher. Then we need to replace her with an adjective clause pronoun such as whom. We can also move the preposition to. After the verb spoke. Instead of whom, we can also use the informal who. We can even replace who with that. We can leave out the adjective clause pronoun completely.