Monday, January 4, 2010

English Grammar In Use When In English Grammar Does One Use Which And That. Can You Please Give Examples?

When in English grammar does one use which and that. Can you please give examples? - english grammar in use

I help someone learn English, and I'm often a mistake to me with their use, and in a few sentences. Can someone be so kind, I use examples in which it and if there is a rule?
Thank you for waiting for a response.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Try this link. :)

http://www.kentlaw.edu/academics/lrw/gri ...

Anonymous said...

Everyone has different uses.
Sometimes you can use one of them, and there are times when you must use one or the other.

"that" can be used as a word in the question, for example. The dog that bit you?

Both, "who" and "the will" is used in relatively terms, unless you are talking about people.
"The house, lived in the Mozart is weak"
"The house Mozart lived in is low." - Either is fine.

If you talk to someone who is not "only" in the clause. You can use "that" or "who", not "who":

"The boy who kissed her hiding place in the Hall"
"The boy who kissed her hiding place in the Hall" - no.

Anonymous said...

Everyone has different uses.
Sometimes you can use one of them, and there are times when you must use one or the other.

"that" can be used as a word in the question, for example. The dog that bit you?

Both, "who" and "the will" is used in relatively terms, unless you are talking about people.
"The house, lived in the Mozart is weak"
"The house Mozart lived in is low." - Either is fine.

If you talk to someone who is not "only" in the clause. You can use "that" or "who", not "who":

"The boy who kissed her hiding place in the Hall"
"The boy who kissed her hiding place in the Hall" - no.

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