Omit clause in 1ST

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Aug 6th, 2022
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How to omit clause in 1ST

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hey listeners David wills here with another episode of Ted IELTS helping you passed your IELTS exam with the highest possible grade today weamp;#39;re gonna be talking about the tricky topic of omitting relative pronouns so letamp;#39;s begin adjective clauses which are known as relative clauses give in extra information about a noun or pronoun as such they are an essential part of English speaking and writing and can add a huge amount of detail to our language itamp;#39;s no surprise then that theyamp;#39;re important for students who want to get a better IELTS score what our adjective clauses Iamp;#39;ve got some lessons up at the Ted website the Ted IELTS website where I talk about adjective clauses Iamp;#39;ll link that below but weamp;#39;ll cover it briefly here today because itamp;#39;s important if an adjective is a word that modifies and none then an adjective clause is a group of word that does the same thing easy letamp;#39;s look at this example thereamp;#

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If the dependent clause is first (again, rather like an introduction to the main clause), it is followed by a comma (like in this sentence and the next).
If the relative pronoun represents the *object* in the clause, you can (and we usually do) omit it. If it represents the *subject* of that clause, you cannot omit it. The person (I saw him- whom I saw)= The person I saw was tall. The person (he saw me-who saw me)= The person who saw me smiled. Can I omit the relative pronoun in the sentence like The hotel which we Quora Can-I-omit-the-relative-pronou Quora Can-I-omit-the-relative-pronou
That is often used to introduce defining relative clauses when they follow the words something, anything, everything, nothing, all or a superlative. It may be omitted when it is not the subject of the clause. Defining relative clauses | EF Global Site (English) EF Education First english-resources english-grammar EF Education First english-resources english-grammar
Remember that although these clauses have subjects and verbs, the subordinating conjunction makes it dependent and unable to stand alone. If the sentence begins with a dependent clause, a comma goes at the end of the clause (and right before the beginning of the next clause).
When that immediately follows a verb of attribution (said, stated, announced, disclosed), it often can be omitted and the meaning will stay the same. Example: She said (that) it was all a hoax. Better to omit that here. When a time element intervenes between the verb and the dependent clause, that should be used. Tips from the Grammar GuruThat: Omit or Include? Michael Mackenzie Communications Michael Mackenzie Communications
Relative clauses can also be reduced to shorter forms if the relative clause modifies the subject of a sentence. Relative clause reduction refers to removing a relative pronoun to reduce: An adjective: person who was happy = happy person. Types of Reduced Relative Clauses - ThoughtCo ThoughtCo reduced-relative-clauses-1 ThoughtCo reduced-relative-clauses-1
The relative pronoun can only be omitted when it is the object of the clause. When the relative pronoun is the subject of the clause, it cannot be omitted.

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