Reach C1 fluency by joining my complete course at app.anglo-link.com/. This teacher-guided online course includes weekly LIVE Lessons and Workshops with me + a Members' WhatsApp Conversation Club to boost your speaking skills. Memberships start from US$6.50 per month.
Hi Minoo, It amazed me how you can explain the lesson down to the last details in under 20 minutes and your explanations are so concise & clear. Grammar lessons can be boring to watch but I never feel bored watching your lessons. You’ve inspired me to follow in your footsteps and I love your accent too. Thanks so much Minoo. You’re amazing!!!
Hi Minoo, I know this lesson has been on TH-cam for a few years now but I’m so thankful to have come across it by chance. I love love the way you describe relative pronouns and how to use them. I’ve observed many other TH-cam instructors besides you, and so far you’re the best of the bests. I’m planning on going back to school to become an English teacher overseas in Asia. You’re my inspiration Minoo!!! Thank you and greetings from the USA.
Hello Lily, Thank you for your lovely comment! I'm delighted to have inspired you in this way, and wish you all the very best with your teaching career in Asia.
Anglo-Link i already know them actually Im a A+ student at english I know things before she explain them 😂😂I got 21/20 I know I made this possible because I added my own question and answered it 😂🤣
Ma'am, I'm very glad of you because you start doing this channel since 10 years ago and until now. You will never give up doing this channel grow and give people knowledge. 😘
Scooby Doo: I agree Foaz Albshir. I picked the word "who" as mentioned, to get more information, about a person or people, previously mentioned Roseanne Tellez of WGN: your correct, remember my teacher at school Donna Kelley: she explains it Joyce Kulhawik of WBZ: we can used the army, *who* really does know Larry King: we agree, 2 relative words have, "who" are we? DJ Khaled: another one Diana Williams of WABC: another one? DJ Khaled? Paula Zahn: hardly, Harlem shake Robosoft 3: later, after these girls are mentioned from Scooby Scooby: oh sphincter
the best teacher who teaches her all followers is very easy way they understand. Even i ever see before this type teacher in my life clearing all matters appearing in her mind like her.
I'm a 68-year-old American native English speaker. Thank you for this comprehensive discussion! I consider the use of "that" to often be a mark of laziness and less correctness. It drives me crazy to hear people saying "person that" instead of "person who". But I hear this from popular radio hosts all the time. Sadly, it appears that "who" as a relative pronoun is dying.
I've compared almost all teaching English TH-cam channels, and I've decided your channel is one of the best, but my brain is burning. Your classes are immaculate. I'll share it with the other people on a social network. Good luck and see ya round! =)
+Knightsudd's Cave Thank you very much for your vote of confidence and for sharing my classes on your social network. Your support is greatly appreciated.
"Not to use 'that' for non-defining relative clauses". I started this video to know whether or not I could use that. I got my answer. Thanks! I owe you.
For people: who, that, whose, whom Example - "The man WHO lent me the book" "The man WHOSE book I borrowed" For objects: which, that, whose Example - "The book THAT I borrowed" "The book WHOSE title is Nemo" For places, times and reason: where, when, why, that Example - "The day WHEN we met" "The library WHERE we met" "The reason WHY I was at the library"
Thank you for the explenations, maybe if you stick at the formal english it would be easy to follow, somtimes when you give both formal and informal it's alot for my littel brain 😊
If you put it in commas, then you must have mentioned which library in a previous sentence. If this is the first time you mention it, then 'where we met' becomes a defining clause and must not be in commas.
@@AngloLinkEnglish in non defining we never drop the relative pronoun,right?but we could omit the relative pronoun with defining relative clause?another arguement..related to the example in the comment..could we say: the library in which we met?
I don't know why it is hard for me to understand you lessons. They make me dizzy. Instead with others teachers I understand so easily. You do great work. This is my fault if don't get along with your lessons. Peace✌️
That's perfectly fine, Kamil! We all learn differently. I'm glad there are other teachers whose teaching style matches your learning style. Thank you for giving my lessons a try anyway.
Not when the article 'the' is present: .... painting of which the origins ... / ..... painting the origins of which .... OR .... painting whose origins ...
I'm wondering if we can say " The book that its cover is blue" as a replacement for " The book whose cover is blue" ? .... I believe it's both grammatically & formally correct, am I right? 😊
In my 35 years of teaching British English, I have neither read nor heard this structure, or come across it in any grammar book. However, you may want to ask an American, Australian, or South African teacher of English. It may be acceptable in other versions.
@@AngloLinkEnglish Thanks for the clarification. I believe this would apply to "The man whom we borrowed (his) book" as a replacement for "The man whom we borrowed the book (from)" & "The man whose book we borrowed". It must be incorrect as well based on your answer, mustn't it?
Ok ik this comment is very late and this video was 5 years ago but I gotta be honest your explanation and how you show us where we have to use relative clauses r absolutely amazing I loved this video thanks a lot this will rlly help me for my exams!!!🙏🙏🙏🙏😁😊
This might sound odd but i feel like the fonts you use make your teaching methods more effective. If this was intentional it really helped! Most videos I watch use aerial which is rather bland therefore making it more boring.
Gladston Almeida mais??? Kkkkkk vc que precisa se expor mais, ouvir mais áudios e vídeos em inglês até se habituar mais e conseguir entender melhor.. Falantes de inglês no dia a dia falam ainda mais rápido e confusamente
she is perfect and doesnt speak quickly. you can choose a slower speed on youtube if you need. but she doesn't have to be slower only because you want it
Helloo ma'am,..i am from India...and i want to speak English fluently...but i can't.. there is no other whose practice with them...plz give me some suggestions.. thank you
I am sorry, but the incorrect way of using who and whom is not about modern English and spoken English, it is rather simply about people who do not know which word goes where. What about whoever and whomever? And I also think in informal English you can still say "The book I borrowed is on the table" No need to say "The book which I borrowed is on the table."
Summary : extra information added that is not relevant to the sentence is a relative clause Ex - Michael , who had homework , was sad ( who had homework is relative clause ) Information that is relevant in a sentence is a main clause Ex - Michael , who had homework , was sad ( Michael was sad is the main clause )
Reach C1 fluency by joining my complete course at app.anglo-link.com/. This teacher-guided online course includes weekly LIVE Lessons and Workshops with me + a Members' WhatsApp Conversation Club to boost your speaking skills. Memberships start from US$6.50 per month.
I recommend 1,25 speed for this one.
Yeah I tryed 1.25 speed it works better on this video
1.5 is better
Thanks man
Ty
Let's just skip the video and fail our exams
The fact that the uploader is still active in the comment section is amazing!
It's the least I can do in response to the positive comments I receive.
@@AngloLinkEnglish awwww that's so sweet...
Hi Minoo,
It amazed me how you can explain the lesson down to the last details in under 20 minutes and your explanations are so concise & clear. Grammar lessons can be boring to watch but I never feel bored watching your lessons. You’ve inspired me to follow in your footsteps and I love your accent too. Thanks so much Minoo. You’re amazing!!!
Thanks a lot, Lily, for your lovely comment! I'm so glad that you've found my lessons easy-to-follow and helpful. Best wishes to you.
With these type of videos, you can understand more than at a classroom
Great! I'm glad this has been helpful.
right ! this kind of videos is quick, simple and to the point
As a native British sometimes even I need a quick reminder, really nicely done, thank-you :)
You're most welcome.
Hello
@@saidamissarou3568 hello
Yeah indeed
@@muribnightmare7591 hhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Hi Minoo,
I know this lesson has been on TH-cam for a few years now but I’m so thankful to have come across it by chance. I love love the way you describe relative pronouns and how to use them. I’ve observed many other TH-cam instructors besides you, and so far you’re the best of the bests. I’m planning on going back to school to become an English teacher overseas in Asia. You’re my inspiration Minoo!!! Thank you and greetings from the USA.
Hello Lily,
Thank you for your lovely comment! I'm delighted to have inspired you in this way, and wish you all the very best with your teaching career in Asia.
Age cannot wither nor custom stale its infinite variety...
The most professional explanation on TH-cam, thank you for your effort!
Thanks a lot, Piotr! Your positive feedback on the quality of my work means a great deal to me. I'm encouraged to keep up the standard.
My school sent this for online classes 😂😂😂😂
Excellent! I hope you watched all of it and took notes :-)
Anglo-Link i already know them actually Im a A+ student at english I know things before she explain them 😂😂I got 21/20 I know I made this possible because I added my own question and answered it 😂🤣
:-)
Same
Yea my school to who sent this for online classes
This is the English channel which I prefer. Minoo is a very good teacher who used to live in Iran.
Thank you, Mark!
Ah my cover is blown!! How did you guess??
If I remember correctly, I saw that your photo had changed to this one in one of our threads :-)
Ma'am, I'm very glad of you because you start doing this channel since 10 years ago and until now. You will never give up doing this channel grow and give people knowledge. 😘
Thank you! I'm glad my lessons have been helpful to you.
Good morning I would like to improve my English language. Just To know if you can correct my mistake ..
Who refers to people
which refes to things and animal s
that refers to people things and animal
where for place
when for time
why for reason
thanks
hi
Foaz Albshir THANK U
Foaz Albshir f
Scooby Doo: I agree Foaz Albshir.
I picked the word "who" as mentioned, to get more information, about a person or people, previously mentioned
Roseanne Tellez of WGN: your correct, remember my teacher at school
Donna Kelley: she explains it
Joyce Kulhawik of WBZ: we can used the army, *who* really does know
Larry King: we agree, 2 relative words have, "who" are we?
DJ Khaled: another one
Diana Williams of WABC: another one? DJ Khaled?
Paula Zahn: hardly, Harlem shake
Robosoft 3: later, after these girls are mentioned from Scooby
Scooby: oh sphincter
What about whom?
My teacher sent this video for my online classroom !!!
I love these classes and the way the presenter talks, amazing.
Thanks a lot! Happy online teaching!
the best teacher who teaches her all followers is very easy way they understand. Even i ever see before this type teacher in my life clearing all matters appearing in her mind like her.
Thank you! I appreciate your kind comment.
I have to give you thanks for your video, was very helpful, I couldn't understand my teacher.
You're very welcome, Lucy.
I am in love with your videos, very detailed, well content, and perfectly organized
Thank you very much, Linh! I'm glad you're enjoying my lessons.
you're amazing
I have a test tomorrow and I've learned here, and really helped me
+reut twito
I'm very glad to read this.
same! learning for english test too
I do love the way which Angle is teaching. I have learned a lot. Thanks
You're very welcome!
It is such a good lesson that I learned clearly. Greetings from Turkey.
Glad to hear that!
good teacher + good explanation= full mark ..................................
MHD REMIZ
🤨🤨🤨🤨🤦🏻♀️
It's called a full stop not mark
i swear her English is fluent
i like the way she explains also very very clear keep it up
Thank you!
Anglo-Link i never knew you would answer cuz some youtubers ignore me lol
That's the least I can do to say thank you for your support. Happy studies!
@@AngloLinkEnglish thank you ! i swear you are the best teacher i wish you were my teacher
Thank you again! I am your virtual teacher! I hope you will benefit from my other lessons on YT as well.
The explanation is epically SURREAL. Thank you very much.
My pleasure ... I think!
Really you are the best teacher that I have ever seen :
Thanks a lot!
I'm a 68-year-old American native English speaker. Thank you for this comprehensive discussion! I consider the use of "that" to often be a mark of laziness and less correctness. It drives me crazy to hear people saying "person that" instead of "person who". But I hear this from popular radio hosts all the time. Sadly, it appears that "who" as a relative pronoun is dying.
You're welcome! Yes, 'who' is a lot more elegant, so it's a shame that 'that' is replacing it.
thank you very much, i have enjoyed and benefited very much from this lesson...greetings to you.
+Omar Owimmer
You're most welcome. I'm glad you've enjoyed this lesson.
+Anglo-Link at 14:50 you said that ,what is not a relative pronoun ,but you used it why ??
Anglo-Link Hool
Anglo-Link thank you very much
Omar Owimmer I
My teacher sent this school work in the Google classroom 😁👍.and now i understand.😊👍
That's great!
👌🏻Thank you It helped me on my homework 🌻I will subscribe 🤲🏻Thanks alot🌻
You're very welcome! I hope you enjoy my other lessons too.
Thanks 👍😌
You helped me with my homework thanks Xxxxx
You're very welcome.
@@AngloLinkEnglish c:😊😊
It is the best video on relative pronouns.During making of this video you have used your excellent teaching experience.
Thanks.
Thank you, Muhammad! I'm glad this lesson has been helpful.
My teacher gave this as an assignment to watch and, trust me it helped me alot all my queries are gone
I'm glad this was helpful to you!
Thank you for all these pretty videos. You're an amazing teacher :)
Thank you very much for your lovely comment, Miha!
Thank you very much for this explanation.
your teaching skill are spectacular .... good job ,you are the best teacher I have ever met before
Thank you very much for your lovely comment! I do appreciate it your support.
I've compared almost all teaching English TH-cam channels, and I've decided your channel is one of the best, but my brain is burning. Your classes are immaculate. I'll share it with the other people on a social network. Good luck and see ya round! =)
+Knightsudd's Cave
Thank you very much for your vote of confidence and for sharing my classes on your social network. Your support is greatly appreciated.
Thank you so much for all your videos WHICH are all incredibly clear and efficient.
Thank you for helping me greetings from Indonesia, the lesson you gave really helped me once again, thank you🙏🙏
I'm very glad to read that!
You're so very welcome.
Thought you might like to be reminded of that.
Blessings
omg that's the best explanation that I've ever heard or paid attention to i don't even have to use my mind to understand what she says 👍
Thank you!
This is a very impressive video. This is the kind of lesson I am looking for in TH-cam. Very useful.
I'm glad this has been helpful.
I learned a lot from you.
You are such a great teacher
Thank you for your time!
My great pleasure!
You're truly amazing, you explain so well
Thank you very much!
Thank you!.
I enjoyed and benefit from your explaining .
You're most welcome, Yasmen!
you're the best teacher ever, thank u so much for help us
Thanks a lot! I'm glad my lessons are helping you.
This is the best website and the best teacher. 👩🏫 Thank u so much.🏅
Thank you! I'm glad you like my way of teaching.
"Not to use 'that' for non-defining relative clauses".
I started this video to know whether or not I could use that. I got my answer. Thanks! I owe you.
+Vikrant Hardas
Great! I'm glad you found the answer to your question.
For people: who, that, whose, whom
Example -
"The man WHO lent me the book"
"The man WHOSE book I borrowed"
For objects: which, that, whose
Example -
"The book THAT I borrowed"
"The book WHOSE title is Nemo"
For places, times and reason: where, when, why, that
Example -
"The day WHEN we met"
"The library WHERE we met"
"The reason WHY I was at the library"
Excellent!!!!!
I can't speak English, but I study it. I didn't understand this lesson at all, but after this, I can understand, thank you.
شكرا جزيلا ☺️
You're very welcome.
My teacher sent this video in online classroom
Nicely Explained👍
Thank you!
Thanks 😊
Welcome!
Thank you mis It helped me a lot for my upcoming exams
You're most welcome.
Thank you for the explenations, maybe if you stick at the formal english it would be easy to follow, somtimes when you give both formal and informal it's alot for my littel brain 😊
You're welcome, Hind!
I know there's so much information at once! It will help if you take some notes for yourself.
I love the lesson; well-structured / easy explanation I'll send it to my students right now🤗
Thank you, Maryam! I hope your students enjoy it.
Very understandable.good teaching.God bless you.
Thank you!
Relative clauses can be quite confusing and even native English speakers often mess them up. Thanks for this clear explanation
+Pick Up English
You're welcome. I'm glad I've managed to simplify the topic to some extent.
I have a presentation about this tomorrow..
Thank you...
My pleasure! I hope it went well.
thank you for the help .Tomorrow i have a grammar exam about this
You're welcome. Good luck with your test.
Thank you for turkish translate 🌸💞
I swear you teach better than my english teacher.
Thank you, you are the only reason i will get high grades.
You're very welcome.
Her voice is so calm, just loved it.
Thank you, Gabriel! I'm glad you've enjoyed this lesson.
In the sentence: "The library where we met is the largest in the city." Should I write "where we met" between commas?
If you put it in commas, then you must have mentioned which library in a previous sentence. If this is the first time you mention it, then 'where we met' becomes a defining clause and must not be in commas.
@@AngloLinkEnglish thank you!
@@AngloLinkEnglish in non defining we never drop the relative pronoun,right?but we could omit the relative pronoun with defining relative clause?another arguement..related to the example in the comment..could we say: the library in which we met?
this is great for school nones my elementary teacher sent this to us due cv19
Excellent! I hope you liked the lesson.
That's a great way to get my English improve !
"That's a great way for my English to improve!"
+ birth.. ,aham Ban
ggu
That's a great way to improve my English.
I don't know why it is hard for me to understand you lessons. They make me dizzy. Instead with others teachers I understand so easily. You do great work. This is my fault if don't get along with your lessons. Peace✌️
That's perfectly fine, Kamil! We all learn differently. I'm glad there are other teachers whose teaching style matches your learning style. Thank you for giving my lessons a try anyway.
I often follow Minoo's classes which give me ideas for my own grammar lessons.
Thanks For traduction To Arabic Love U😍😘🐭
These are automatic subtitles, so they may not always be accurate.
@@AngloLinkEnglish Aaaa Okay teacher and Thanks A lot you helped mee
You're welcome!
@@AngloLinkEnglish 😍😍😍
I have a question about point 9. Can i write "whose the origins were unknown"? I don't understand why there is "of which".
Not when the article 'the' is present: .... painting of which the origins ... / ..... painting the origins of which .... OR .... painting whose origins ...
Anglo-Link Thank you very much ;) Greetings from Poland 😀
You're most welcome.
BAH VALEU AI TIA, TIREI 10 EM INGREIX, TU É FODA MESMO GURIA
ahahhahaha
bom d+
I suggest you learn to speak Portuguese properly before try learn another language
My school sent the channel link flr our online classes😂❤❤
That's so perfect ❤
thanks for your time! subscribed! I learned so much things from you..
Thank you, Ibrahim!
What about those special situations like, for example, 'to whom' 'in which' ? what are they called...? I'm so confused
They're still the relative clauses, except that the preposition starts the clause rather than the pronoun.
Thank you 🌺
Now I understand 😄
likes this comment if she helped you understand 💗
Thank you, Cindy!
You are the best teacher on the world I like your teach thanks
Thank you very much!
anglo is someone whom many people like and whose videos are so entretaining and educational
Thank you, Alexis, for the great example and the compliment!
Really thankful Miss. It was tremendously amazing and useful..🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
My Pleasure!
I'm wondering if we can say " The book that its cover is blue" as a replacement for " The book whose cover is blue" ? .... I believe it's both grammatically & formally correct, am I right? 😊
Although the meaning is expressed, I'm afraid that's not an acceptable formulation in English.
In my 35 years of teaching British English, I have neither read nor heard this structure, or come across it in any grammar book. However, you may want to ask an American, Australian, or South African teacher of English. It may be acceptable in other versions.
You may want to ask the question in one of these forums. Someone may have an answer:
english.stackexchange.com/
forum.wordreference.com/
@@AngloLinkEnglish Thanks for the clarification. I believe this would apply to "The man whom we borrowed (his) book" as a replacement for "The man whom we borrowed the book (from)" & "The man whose book we borrowed". It must be incorrect as well based on your answer, mustn't it?
Thank you 😇. This video helped me a lot 🙂
You're very welcome!
Would you explain me "in which"coming sentence?
Thank you for this video! My school sent this video for my online class, I have subscribed to you!
You're welcome, Ari, and thank you for subscribing.
Ok ik this comment is very late and this video was 5 years ago but I gotta be honest your explanation and how you show us where we have to use relative clauses r absolutely amazing I loved this video thanks a lot this will rlly help me for my exams!!!🙏🙏🙏🙏😁😊
Thank you! I'm glad it has helped you!
This might sound odd but i feel like the fonts you use make your teaching methods more effective. If this was intentional it really helped! Most videos I watch use aerial which is rather bland therefore making it more boring.
Thank you! I'll pass on your compliment to the person who creates my slides.
In the very last sentence, 'I don't know the reason this has happened' sounds a bit awkward...
It does a little, but it's grammatically correct.
I'm from Brazil and I'd like you to speak slowly and clearly. Thanks!
Gladston Almeida mais??? Kkkkkk vc que precisa se expor mais, ouvir mais áudios e vídeos em inglês até se habituar mais e conseguir entender melhor.. Falantes de inglês no dia a dia falam ainda mais rápido e confusamente
she is perfect and doesnt speak quickly. you can choose a slower speed on youtube if you need. but she doesn't have to be slower only because you want it
Gladston Almeida I think 💭 she's clear and perfect 👌🏻
KKKKKKKKKK se é o bichão mesmo
Why don't you play the video at a slower speed.
thank you so much, you're an angel
You're more than welcome, Lila!
I am very thank you for your efforts to teaches us the English lesson and I keep to watch your Lesson every Day on the You Tube channel.
+Khaled Wadoud
You're welcome, Khaled. I'm glad you're enjoying my lessons.
Helloo ma'am,..i am from India...and i want to speak English fluently...but i can't.. there is no other whose practice with them...plz give me some suggestions.. thank you
I share some tips in this video: th-cam.com/video/gPFFrA9CvwE/w-d-xo.html
I hope this will be helpful.
@@AngloLinkEnglish thank you very much.. ma'am...it will be very useful for me....again heartly thanks....
I am sorry, but the incorrect way of using who and whom is not about modern English and spoken English, it is rather simply about people who do not know which word goes where. What about whoever and whomever?
And I also think in informal English you can still say "The book I borrowed is on the table" No need to say "The book which I borrowed is on the table."
+My Way Out It's a little too confusing, for me at least. Therefore I've decided to only use whom after a preposition.
My Way Out hello it's just what she said : you can drop "which" because it is relative to an object (not a subject)
Jay Kapoor you do NOT put an adjective between the auxiliary verb “to” and the infinitive verb.
yes is right I spoke in spanish and I know that
You said that what is not a relative pronoun,but you used "what" question 6
Yes, to remind you that it's not used as a relative pronoun.
Thanks ...this will really help me in my examination
🥰 thanks
Excellent! Good luck with your exam.
I love you, who made my work easier
Thank you!
Summary :
extra information added that is not relevant to the sentence is a relative clause
Ex - Michael , who had homework , was sad ( who had homework is relative clause )
Information that is relevant in a sentence is a main clause
Ex - Michael , who had homework , was sad ( Michael was sad is the main clause )
it is 3 am now, I didn't understand everything
but I am wondering if it because i am stupid or because my brain is off now
Definitely the latter! 3 a.m. is not the best time to study English grammar!
My teacher sent me for online Class
Hi Minoo Aglo link I understood all ur lessons. it was like listening to music . Thanks a lot
My pleasure!
Very nice madam and God bless you for very good teaching of English to us
It's my pleasure!
MY ENGLISH TEACHER SENT IT TI ME IN ONLINE CLASSES😂🙂
Nice
Thank you!
I don’t understend very well becuse i’m don’t speak english
viva españitaaa ajajaja
Brilliant material with all examples. Thank bunch👍
Thank you!
Thank you so much
You're most welcome!