0.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns; 'who', 'that' or 'whom' to refer to people, 'which' or 'that' for things, 'whose' for possessions, 'where' for places, 'when' for times, and 'why' for reasons.
1.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Also remember that when a person or people is not already clear or defined, such as 'people' in this sentence, we can use 'that', apart form 'who', to refer to them, and there will be no commas used to separate the relative clause from the rest of the sentence.
2.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Also remember that when a person or people is already clear or defined, such as 'the people in my office' in this sentence, we cannot use 'that', apart form 'who', to refer to them, and we must use commas to separate the relative clause from the rest of the sentence.
3.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Also remember that when a thing or things is not already clear or defined, such as 'a university' in this sentence, we can use 'that', apart form 'which', to refer to them, and there will be no commas used to separate the relative clause from the rest of the sentence.
4.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Also remember that when using 'whose' for possessions, these are more than just physical things people can possess, they are anything people or things 'have', so to speak. They are anything that could be preceded by a possessive pronoun, like 'his', 'her', 'its', or 'their'.
5.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Here, are they treating the school like a thing or a place?
6.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Here, are they treating the school like a thing or a place?
7.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Here, are they treating the house like a thing or a place?
8.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns, whether they are people, things, possessions, places, times, or reasons. Here, are they treating the house like a thing or a place?
9.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns; 'who', 'that' or 'whom' to refer to people, 'which' or 'that' for things, 'whose' for possessions, 'where' for places, 'when' for times, and 'why' for reasons.
10.
Remember that relative pronouns aways refer to concrete types of nouns; 'who', 'that' or 'whom' to refer to people, 'which' or 'that' for things, 'whose' for possessions, 'where' for places, 'when' for times, and 'why' for reasons.