Here is an example of some English sentences without relative clauses:
These sentences are correct, but they are very short and simple. You can use relative clauses to make your sentences in English sound more fluent and natural:
Non-defining relative clauses add EXTRA information to the sentence.
Defining relative clauses add ESSENTIAL information to the sentence.
You can see if a relative clause is defining or non-defining by removing it from the sentence. If you remove a non-defining relative clause, the sentence still has the same meaning. If you remove a defining relative clause, the sentence has a different meaning or is incomplete.
Example of a sentence with a NON-DEFINING relative clause:
If you remove “who lives in California,” the sentence still has the same meaning:
Example of a sentence with a DEFINING relative clause:
If you remove “who failed English class three times,” the sentence is incomplete:
Therefore, the relative clause “who failed English class three times” is essential information, because it defines which student, specifically, we are talking about.
In written English, use a comma before and after non-defining relative clauses.
Use which for non-defining relative clauses, and use a comma before it.
Use that for defining relative clauses, and don’t use a comma before it.
In the first case, it’s possible that we have two types of bananas in the house:
…and that only the first bananas are rotten, but the second bananas are not rotten.
In the second case, all the bananas in the house were bought on Monday, and they are all rotten.
Again, to decide if a clause is defining or non-defining, try removing it from the sentence:
Congratulations - you have completed Relative Clause Exercise. You scored %%SCORE%% out of %%TOTAL%%. Your performance has been rated as %%RATING%%