Hi Pretty easy, interesting as well. So which and that for things,on the other hand which and who for people. 1.I live in a suburb which is located to the north east of the capital. 2. My friend who lives in Europe is so energetic. 3. That man who has just talked to me is our neighbour.
Can we write like this? 1.Hogwart is the school to which Harry potter goes. Because I've seen in some sentences that preposition comes before the relative pronouns like " A deadline is a point in time before which you must complete something."
Hello I have just read the rules of grammar on your website concerning where and which.. i didn't understand the nuance you made between . When should we use Where, when should we use which...really twisted for me.
@@dyas5273 hello If you read the rules on their website, you will see that the difference between the use of where and which is not only a question of place and identity. They made a nuance about "which" that I don't understand.
Which is a relative pronoun that used to replace subject and object as noun which other than human, such a thing, event or phenomenon, and animal as well. Which can also be a subject.
@@dyas5273thank you. But, if you read my posts, it's not the use of the word "which" that confuses me, but the way of we must use "Where ". Watch their grammar website about this topic
@@dyas5273 That is what confuses me : We use where for relative clauses that give information about something in a place. In the Session 1 video, we saw a building. We heard that Handel and Hendrix lived in that building. They rented apartments there. So we say: “This is the building where Handel and Hendrix rented apartments.” We use which when we are giving some information about the whole place. We see a building. We are told that it (as in all of it, the entire place) is home to Handel House. So, we can say: “This is the building which/that is home to Handel House.” Let’s look at some more examples: Broadcasting House is the building where the Learning English team work (They work there/in that building). Broadcasting House is the BBC’s main building which was recently redeveloped (The whole building/It was redeveloped). London is the city where you can see Buckingham Palace, Big Ben, and the River Thames (all of these sights are there/in London). London is the city which hosted the 2012 Olympic Games (The whole city hosted the event).
I have two questions here... 1. Can the second sentence be like "Hogwarts is the school where Harry Potter goes"? 2. Why the 3rd sentence does not include "to" i.e. "Hermione is the girl who married to Ron Weasley".
Ritika Maurya Ritika Maurya 1. you can't use simple tense for things that happened in the past. Went is the correct verb to use in that context. 2. this sentence is not using to because it's again happened in the past. She did. You use to when you want to explain a status of someone. for example: Selena Gomez is married to Hans. This sentence explaining the status of Selena that she is not single but a married woman. Hope that make sense
@@JoeJoe-hn2nh I guess Ritika's question is about using where as a relative pronoun. In other words can the phrase "the school to which Harry went" be replaced by the phrase "the school where Harry went"...
and can you say "Hogwarts is the school where HP went to." That refers to HP but the clause is talking about the place Hogwarts, so maybe "where" is more appropriate here.
OMG I didn't finish the Harry Potter film series and I didn't know that Hermione married Ron before I watched this video.THAt's a big spoiler. I can't believe. BUT HOW DOES IT BE POSSIBLE?
You could use 'which' or 'where' for a school because it is both a thing and a place, so: Hogwarts is the school where Harry Potter goes. Hogwarts is the school which Harry Potter goes to.
Now learn about non-defining relative clauses with Dan th-cam.com/video/ohhyIC-AZFY/w-d-xo.html
Great job by a great team , thank you a lot BBC
BBC is a programme which I learn English with on the go.
I'm a intermediate level student, who use a BBC channel form improve my skills. Thanks for sharing free several contents.
You're welcome! We're happy to help! Good luck in your English language journey! If you ever have any questions, just let us know! 👍
Extreme useful. That's the best way to improve your English
Hi Saytinh. Thank you for your comment. We are glad you find our videos useful.☺️
Super!Thx BBC LE!
Thank you, BBC. 💚
Are you ok? 👁️👄👁️
Wonderful!
My compliments to the great team ever
Ali Aljmaly - greatest* (best) team ever
🍋
Yes of corse the best ever
I love you, guys. Thanks a lot!!
Hi Alice and Finn 🙋🏼♀️
Great as always , thanks a lot 🌹
I’ve got all of them 👍🏻😊 but in QUIZ RIGHT OR WRONG I’ve got 5/6 😕
I don't care
Does the phrases and dependent clause are same and Why if it's not ?
Hi
Pretty easy, interesting as well.
So which and that for things,on the other hand which and who for people.
1.I live in a suburb which is located to the north east of the capital.
2. My friend who lives in Europe is so energetic.
3. That man who has just talked to me is our neighbour.
Very nice, Ahmed! Well done!
thank you😊
I can't thank you enough .
Can we write like this?
1.Hogwart is the school to which Harry potter goes.
Because I've seen in some sentences that preposition comes before the relative pronouns like
" A deadline is a point in time before which you must complete something."
Great! I missed the summary slide...
Hello
I have just read the rules of grammar on your website concerning where and which.. i didn't understand the nuance you made between . When should we use Where, when should we use which...really twisted for me.
According of my humble oppinion, we use ”where” that relative of place and we use ”whice” that relative of a thing.
@@dyas5273 hello
If you read the rules on their website, you will see that the difference between the use of where and which is not only a question of place and identity. They made a nuance about "which" that I don't understand.
Which is a relative pronoun that used to replace subject and object as noun which other than human, such a thing, event or phenomenon, and animal as well. Which can also be a subject.
@@dyas5273thank you. But, if you read my posts, it's not the use of the word "which" that confuses me, but the way of we must use "Where ". Watch their grammar website about this topic
@@dyas5273
That is what confuses me :
We use where for relative clauses that give information about something in a place. In the Session 1 video, we saw a building. We heard that Handel and Hendrix lived in that building. They rented apartments there. So we say: “This is the building where Handel and Hendrix rented apartments.”
We use which when we are giving some information about the whole place. We see a building. We are told that it (as in all of it, the entire place) is home to Handel House. So, we can say: “This is the building which/that is home to Handel House.”
Let’s look at some more examples:
Broadcasting House is the building where the Learning English team work (They work there/in that building).
Broadcasting House is the BBC’s main building which was recently redeveloped (The whole building/It was redeveloped).
London is the city where you can see Buckingham Palace, Big Ben, and the River Thames (all of these sights are there/in London).
London is the city which hosted the 2012 Olympic Games (The whole city hosted the event).
I have two questions here... 1. Can the second sentence be like "Hogwarts is the school where Harry Potter goes"?
2. Why the 3rd sentence does not include "to" i.e. "Hermione is the girl who married to Ron Weasley".
Ritika Maurya Ritika Maurya 1. you can't use simple tense for things that happened in the past. Went is the correct verb to use in that context.
2. this sentence is not using to because it's again happened in the past. She did. You use to when you want to explain a status of someone. for example: Selena Gomez is married to Hans. This sentence explaining the status of Selena that she is not single but a married woman. Hope that make sense
@@JoeJoe-hn2nh okay... Thank s a lot for replying...
@@JoeJoe-hn2nh I guess Ritika's question is about using where as a relative pronoun. In other words can the phrase "the school to which Harry went" be replaced by the phrase "the school where Harry went"...
well done
Harry Potter surprised me at quizes.. 😁
I don't really like the causes, but I like the transmissions
Fantastic
thanksssssssss
And Neil of course
But why you didn't say about WHERE? We use WHERE use when want to speak about place. Do you agree with me, dear friends?)
Yes, I do agree dear
She's the doctor WHOM I saw yesterday. do I make any mistakes?
Alice: don't you think Hermione should have married Harry?
Finn: well it's her choice
Me: I think it's J K Rowling's choice. 😜😜
But Sam is great teacher
Would "Hogwarts is the school which Harry Potter went to" be correct too?
Candy Twiggy Twist perfect construction! 🍋
Yes! 100% correct.
and can you say "Hogwarts is the school where HP went to."
That refers to HP but the clause is talking about the place Hogwarts, so maybe "where" is more appropriate here.
а где Homework
Wonder land Alice I love that name
OMG I didn't finish the Harry Potter film series and I didn't know that Hermione married Ron before I watched this video.THAt's a big spoiler. I can't believe. BUT HOW DOES IT BE POSSIBLE?
amé
I can understand some things but I can't say it really
Dont watch this video. Spoiler alert* Hey guys, you should only talk in general terms to avoid spoilers for people who haven't seen the movies.
Why we didint use "hogwarts is the school which harry potter go" . I tought that it could be.
Because you use "where" for places and *which* for things
and 'harry potter' is singular (it's not 'the Potter's') so you'd have to use 'goes'
You could use 'which' or 'where' for a school because it is both a thing and a place, so:
Hogwarts is the school where Harry Potter goes.
Hogwarts is the school which Harry Potter goes to.
Ah, a system error has led the transaction astray to an invalid email address.