Intermediate level (B1) activity requiring 25 minutes. Two-page worksheet for practicing relative clauses with who, which, where and when. Each student receives one copy of the worksheet
Relative pronouns can be used with who, which, whose, where, when. Relative pronouns can be omitted when they don't need to be used. Relative pronouns can be used in both defining and non-defining clauses
Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses about people and things. Who/whom for people, which for things, that for both. Who/whom can be omitted when object of relative clause
Provide essential information about someone or something. Usually come immediately after the noun they describe. Use relative pronouns like who, that, which, whose or whom. Can use that instead of who, whom or which in informal speech. Can refer to subject or object of verb
Use comma before "but" in compound sentences with two independent clauses. Independent clauses can stand alone as complete sentences. Dependent clauses lack subjects and verbs and don't need commas
German sentences follow either Subject + Verb + Object or Object + Verb + Subject order. The verb always comes in the second position in German sentences. Adverb phrases can modify sentence structure by placing the verb after the subject