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S t age 15 Relative Clauses. More than you probably want to know about relatives! Not these..... These are Augustus’s relatives!. What we’ll cover. What is a clause? The English relative clause The English relative pronoun The Latin relative pronoun Latin relative clauses. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Stage 15Relative Clauses
More than you probably want to know about
relatives!Not these..... These are Augustus’s relatives!
What we’ll cover• What is a clause?• The English relative clause• The English relative pronoun• The Latin relative pronoun• Latin relative clauses
What is a clause?• Any thought, idea, or event which is expressed
in language
Clause 1: Rufilla is unhappy.Clause 2: Rufilla lives far fom London.
2 clauses: Rufilla is unhappy because she lives far fom London.2 clauses: Rufilla, who lives far fom London, is unhappy.
An English Relative Clause is... ... a giant adjective clause, giving us information
about a noun in another clause.
Let’s look at an example showing how the relative clause evolves.....
Clause 1: The boys are not listening to the master.
Clause 2: The master is reading a very long story.
Here’s an example – we have two single clauses:
Relative Clause
Step 1:Clause 1: The boys are not listening to the master.
Clause 2: The master is reading a very long story.
Substitute a pronoun for “master” in Clause 2.
Clause 1: The boys are not listening to the master.
Clause 2: He is reading a very long story.
Now, we’ll weave the two clauses into one sentence – with a Main Clause and a relative clause describing a noun in the Main Clause.
Weave into one sentence
Weave them together into one sentence.....
MAIN CLAUSE: The boys are not listening to the master, RELATIVE CLAUSE: ? is reading a very long story.who
Step 2:Clause 1: The boys are not listening to the master.
Clause 2: He is reading a very long story.
giant adjective describing the master
English Relative Pronoun• The English relative pronoun has cases – just like in
Latin!PEOPLE/ANIMALS ANIMALS/THINGS
Nominative who whichAcusative whom which
Note: 1. In English, we often say “that” instead of “who,””whom,” or “which.” The boy whom I like plays basketball becomes The boy that I like plays basketball 2. In English we also can omit the relative pronoun altogether.
The boy I Iike plays basketball.
THIS CANNOT HAPPEN IN LATIN – LATI N MUST ALWAYS USE A RELATIVE PRONOUN
Another Example• Clause 1: The slave is terrified.• Clause 2: The bull is chasing the slave.
• Clause 1: The slave is terrified.• Clause 2: The bull is chasing the slave.
Step 1: Replace “slave” in Clause 2 with a pronoun – what pronoun?
Clause 1: The slave is terrified.Clause 2: The bull is chasing __?__.
Now, we’ll weave the two clauses into one sentence – with a Main Clause and a relative clause describing a noun in the Main Clause.
him
Clause 1: The slave is terrified.Clause 2: The bull is chasing him.
Step 2A: Merge the two sentences....
The slave – the bull is chasing him – is terrified
Step 2B: A bit more work to make one MAIN CLAUSE and one RELATIVE CLAUSE
The slave – the bull is chasing him – is terrified
Now, replace the pronoun “him” with a relative pronoun – what relative pronoun?
whom
Final AdjustmentsThe slave – the bull is chasing whom - is terrified.
That’s not how we really would say it....So, move the relative pronoun – whom – to the
beginning of the relative clause....
And EUGE!
The slave, whom the bull is chasing, is terrified.
giant mutant adjective describing the slave