Relative clause

Definition

A subordinate clause functioning as a modifier of an NP.

It has an antecedent.

It contains a gap or dependency linked to that antecedent.

Headed by a relative word (relative pronoun or relative adverb) or is bare.

Examples

> the claim that she made

→ that she made = relative clause, modifying claim

> the place where we met

→ where we met = relative clause modifying place

Key properties

  • Cannot substitute for an NP.

  • Always modifies an NP.

  • Involves an anaphoric dependency.

When you can drop a relative pronoun

Clause type

Pronoun role

Can you drop it?

Example

Restrictive

Subject

❌ No

The person who called you…

Restrictive

Object

✅ Yes

The book (that) I read…

Non-restrictive

Subject

❌ No

My uncle, who lives in Paris…

Non-restrictive

Object

❌ No (in standard English)

My uncle, whom I met yesterday…

Ways to Introduce Relative Clauses in CGEL

In CGEL, a relative clause can be introduced by a few different types of heads, depending on whether the clause modifies an NP and what role its internal constituents play. The main ones are:


1. Relative Pronouns

  • Function: Serve as the subject, object, or complement inside the relative clause and link it to the antecedent NP.

  • Common forms: who, whom, whose, which, that

  • Examples:

    1. The man who arrived yesterday is my uncle.who = subject of relative clause

    2. The book that I read was fascinating.that = object of relative clause

    3. The girl whose bike was stolen is upset.whose = possessive determiner

Notes:

  • Relative pronouns are obligatory when the antecedent is explicitly marked as subject/object in the clause.

  • That can function as a general relative pronoun for humans or things, without distinction of case.


2. Relative Adverbs

  • Already discussed: where, when, why

  • Function: Serve as the adverbial head of the relative clause; link it to a time, place, or reason antecedent.

  • Restriction: They cannot serve as subjects or objects; they act adverbially inside the relative clause.


3. Zero or Ø Relative

  • Function: Relative clause introduced with no overt relative pronoun or adverb.

  • Often called a “gap” relative or bare relative in CGEL.

  • Examples:

    1. The book I read was fascinating. → Ø (no relative pronoun), object role filled by gap

    2. The people we met were friendly. → Ø, object of met

Notes:

  • Usually occurs when the relative pronoun would be the object of the clause and can be omitted.

  • The gap is co-indexed with the antecedent NP.

  • CGEL treats this as syntactically fully grammatical and a common alternative to overt pronouns.

4. Other Possibilities (less common in standard English)

  • Sometimes “as” in certain comparative relatives:

    • He is taller than I am. → comparative clause

  • But generally, relative clauses are introduced by:

    1. Relative pronouns → for NP-subject, object, or possessive functions

    2. Relative adverbs → for time, place, reason

    3. Zero relative → gaps where object is understood