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Intermediate

Relative Clauses

How relative clauses modify nouns in Spanish, English and Chinese.

Comparar idiomas

English uses who, which, that, whose. Spanish uses que, quien, el cual, cuyo with subjunctive for uncertainty. Chinese uses de after the clause, with no relative pronoun.

Ejemplos

Subject relative (The man who came)

El hombre que vino

Object relative (The book that I read)

El libro que leí

Relativized subject kept

Yes (El hombre que vino)

Relativized object kept

No (El libro que leí)

Possessive relative (whose)

cuyo (agrees with possessed)

Preposition + relative

que / el cual (formal)

Restrictive vs non-restrictive

Both with que; commas for non-restrictive

Ejemplos

Subject relative (The man who came)

The man who/that came

Object relative (The book that I read)

The book that/which I read

Relativized subject kept

Yes (The man who came)

Relativized object kept

No (The book I read)

Possessive relative (whose)

whose (invariable)

Preposition + relative

preposition + whom/which

Restrictive vs non-restrictive

that for restrictive; which for non-restrictive

Ejemplos

Subject relative (The man who came)

láiderén

Object relative (The book that I read)

deshū

Relativized subject kept

No (láilederén — 'came' has no subject)

Relativized object kept

No (deshū)

Possessive relative (whose)

de after possessor

Preposition + relative

preposition stays with verb

Restrictive vs non-restrictive

No formal distinction

Comparación rápida

Conceptos gramaticales Español Inglés Chino
Subject relative (The man who came) El hombre que vinoThe man who/that cameláiderén
Object relative (The book that I read) El libro que leíThe book that/which I readdeshū
Relativized subject kept Yes (El hombre que vino)Yes (The man who came)No (láilederén — 'came' has no subject)
Relativized object kept No (El libro que leí)No (The book I read)No (deshū)
Possessive relative (whose) cuyo (agrees with possessed)whose (invariable)de after possessor
Preposition + relative que / el cual (formal)preposition + whom/whichpreposition stays with verb
Restrictive vs non-restrictive Both with que; commas for non-restrictivethat for restrictive; which for non-restrictiveNo formal distinction

Comparación lado a lado

Conceptos gramaticales Español Inglés Chino
Subject relative (The man who came) El hombre que vinoThe man who/that cameláiderén
Object relative (The book that I read) El libro que leíThe book that/which I readdeshū
Relativized subject kept Yes (El hombre que vino)Yes (The man who came)No (láilederén — 'came' has no subject)
Relativized object kept No (El libro que leí)No (The book I read)No (deshū)
Possessive relative (whose) cuyo (agrees with possessed)whose (invariable)de after possessor
Preposition + relative que / el cual (formal)preposition + whom/whichpreposition stays with verb
Restrictive vs non-restrictive Both with que; commas for non-restrictivethat for restrictive; which for non-restrictiveNo formal distinction

Ejemplos en contexto

Subject relative (The man who came)

Español

El hombre que vino

Inglés

The man who/that came

Chino

láiderén

Object relative (The book that I read)

Español

El libro que leí

Inglés

The book that/which I read

Chino

deshū

Relativized subject kept

Español

Yes (El hombre que vino)

Inglés

Yes (The man who came)

Chino

No (láilederén — 'came' has no subject)

Relativized object kept

Español

No (El libro que leí)

Inglés

No (The book I read)

Chino

No (deshū)

Possessive relative (whose)

Español

cuyo (agrees with possessed)

Inglés

whose (invariable)

Chino

de after possessor

Preposition + relative

Español

que / el cual (formal)

Inglés

preposition + whom/which

Chino

preposition stays with verb

Restrictive vs non-restrictive

Español

Both with que; commas for non-restrictive

Inglés

that for restrictive; which for non-restrictive

Chino

No formal distinction

Puntos clave

Spanish: Uses que as the default relative pronoun. Quien for people after prepositions. El cual for formal disambiguation. Cuyo for possession (agree...

English: Uses who for people, which for things, that for either. Whose for possession. Whom for object of preposition (formal). Restrictive vs non-re...

Chinese: Has no relative pronouns. The relative clause simply precedes the noun, linked by 的de. The head noun can be omitted if context is clear.

Key concepts compared: Subject relative (The man who came), Object relative (The book that I read), Relativized subject kept.

Última actualización: 4 de junio de 2026