Grammar Exercise: Relative Clauses

Grammar Exercises – Relative Clauses


Do the exercises below on relative clauses and click the button to check your answers.

(Before doing the exercises, you may want to read the lesson on relative clauses)

Relative Clauses Exercises with Answers

Practice your skills with these relative clauses exercises with answers. From simple examples to advanced sentences, these exercises will help you master the use of relative pronouns like who, which, and whose.

Instructions to the Exercises

  1. Complete the sentences by choosing the correct relative pronoun (who, which, whose) to fill in the blanks.
  2. Rewrite the sentences using relative clauses with who, whose, or which to combine the information.

Follow the examples provided and remember to check your answers by clicking the button. Pay attention to capitalization, punctuation, and spelling to avoid errors.

Relative Clauses Exercises

Choose the correct relative pronoun (who, which, whose).

  1. This is the man saved the kid.
  2. The house windows are open is beautiful..
  3. The writer wrote that article won the Nobel Prize.
  4. He bought a car runs fast.
  5. He was wearing a cap was black.

Re write these sentences using relative clauses.

Use who, whose and which.

  • Example:
    • He drank the juice. He made the juice. He drank the juice which he made.
  1. A lion is an animal. It is very strong.
    A lion
  2. A novelist is a person. He writes novels.
    A novelist
  3. A bottle opener is a device. It opens bottles.
    A bottle opener
  4. The girl speaks Chinese. Her mother writes poems.
    The girl
  5. A detective is someone. He discovers the truth about crimes.
    A detective

Warning

Before submitting the test, check the following:

  • Punctuation and capitalization
  • Spelling
  • Spaces (don't add any unnecessary spaces)

What Are Relative Clauses?

Relative clauses are used to provide extra information about a noun without starting a new sentence. They begin with relative pronouns like who, which, and whose.

  • Who: Refers to people (e.g., The teacher who helped me was kind.)
  • Which: Refers to animals, things, or ideas (e.g., The book which I borrowed is excellent.)
  • Whose: Indicates possession (e.g., The boy whose dog is barking lives next door.)

These clauses make your sentences more informative and engaging.

Relative Materials

Tags: Exercises on Advanced GrammarExercises on Clauses
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