The document contains 21 examples of relative clauses describing famous people, places, objects, and events including:
1) Beethoven, who composed beautiful music despite his hearing loss.
2) Cairo, where you can see the longest river in the world.
3) Napoleon, whose wife was called Josephine.
4) Michael Jackson, whose race was unclear.
5) King Kong, a big creature in love with a beautiful girl whose name started with K.
The document contains 21 examples of relative clauses describing famous people, places, objects, and events including:
1) Beethoven, who composed beautiful music despite his hearing loss.
2) Cairo, where you can see the longest river in the world.
3) Napoleon, whose wife was called Josephine.
4) Michael Jackson, whose race was unclear.
5) King Kong, a big creature in love with a beautiful girl whose name started with K.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
The document contains 21 examples of relative clauses describing famous people, places, objects, and events including:
1) Beethoven, who composed beautiful music despite his hearing loss.
2) Cairo, where you can see the longest river in the world.
3) Napoleon, whose wife was called Josephine.
4) Michael Jackson, whose race was unclear.
5) King Kong, a big creature in love with a beautiful girl whose name started with K.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
1. A man who componed very beautiful music although he couldn’t hear
very well. (Beethoven) 2. A city in Africa where you can see the longest river in the world. (Cairo) 3. Something white teachers use to write on boards. (chalk) 4. A powerful French man whose wife was called Josephine. (Napoleon) 5. An American singer whose colour was not very clear. (Michael Jackson) 6. A big creature that was in love with a beautiful girl and whose name started with a “k”. (King Kong) 7. The country where Count Dracula was from. (Romania) 8. A short man with a moustache who invaded most countries in Europe between 1940 and 1945. (Hitler) 9. An animal that scares mice. (elephant) 10. A piece of paper you pay for when you want to see a film. (ticket) 11. A man who lost his supernatural strength when a woman cut his hair. (Samson) 12. The city where James Joyce was born. (Dublin) 13. An electronic device that stores a large number of music tracks. (ipod) 14. A day when Irish people all over the world wear green.(17 March) 15. The feeling you have when your expectations are not fulfilled. (disappointment) 16. A person who is the property of another person. (slave) 17. The man who was England’s Prime Minister during the Second World War. (Churchill) 18. This is a kind of kitchen tool you use to open a bottle of wine.(cork screw) 19. A city in Europe whose symbol is a mermaid and whose queen has the name of a flower. (Copenhagen) 20. An American writer who wrote mysterious tale and who is considered the creator of detective stories.(Edgar Allan Poe) 21. A day when people play practical jokes on friends. (April Fool’s Day)