| 41. | However, some sentences, such as the above example, can be written both with relativizers and with relative pronouns.
|
| 42. | Alright that doesn't flow well either, but the relative pronoun " dont " means " of which ".
|
| 43. | In that example, the preposition and its object ???? also act as a relative pronoun, without use of-?.
|
| 44. | Is " whose " the correct possessive case relative pronoun for " that " or for inanimate objects?
|
| 45. | Relative clauses are relatively frequent in the modern Serbo-Croatian The most frequently used relative pronoun is " koji ".
|
| 46. | Old Babylonian, along with the closely related dialect dual and a relative pronoun declined in case, number and gender.
|
| 47. | Notice that all of these languages have a verb-final word order, and that none of them have relative pronouns.
|
| 48. | It seems to me that relative pronouns, like qui or que or who, function as nominatives in the relative clauses.
|
| 49. | Because the antecedent, " [ of ] the man ", is possessive, the relative pronoun has become possessive as well.
|
| 50. | The letter is very common in Syriac as it is often attached to the beginning of words as the relative pronoun.
|