The "Who" Clause
We use who to give essential information about a person.
link Linking Sentences
Instead of using two short sentences, we connect them using who.
track_changes Essential Info
Without the "who" clause, we don't know exactly which person you mean. No commas are needed!
sync Who vs. That
In spoken English, you can often use that instead of "who" for people in defining clauses.
Do not use "who" AND the subject pronoun!
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Recent Questions
Haha, I understand! Technically, for animals, we should use "which" or "that". BUT, native speakers often use "who" for their own pets if they have names and personalities (e.g., "Max is a dog who loves to sleep"). For exams, though, stick to "that/which" for animals! pets
When do we use commas? I saw a sentence with commas before: "My father, who is 50, lives here."
Excellent question! That is a "Non-defining" relative clause. We use commas when the information is EXTRA (you only have one father, so we already know who he is). In today's lesson, we learned "Defining" clauses, which give ESSENTIAL info, so no commas! We'll cover commas in the next lesson. sentiment_satisfied
Can I say "The dog who bit me"? My dog feels like a person to me!