A noun clause is used as a subject and a object.
Contoh:
1. I don’t know where she lives.
2. I couldn’t hear what he said.
3. Do you know when they arrive?
4. I don’t know who she is.
5. I wonder whose house that is.
6. What she said surprised me.
7. I don’t know whether/if she will come.
8. I think that he is a good programmer.
Jika
kata what, where, who, whose, that when diletakkan di tengah kalimat,
maka setelah wh-2 tersebut langsung subjek, bukan kata kerja bantu. Contoh no.
4, bukan I don’t know where is she tetapi setelah where harus subjek dulu,
jadi seperti
no.4 tetapi kalau kelompok wh-2
digunakan sebagai kalimat tanya dan diletakkan di awal kalimat, maka setelah
wh- 2 datang kata kerja bantu. Misal where is your file?, bukan
where your file is? When did you complete your report?
Bukan When you completed your report?
Perhatikan dialogue di
bawah ini
You seem a bit upset – why is that?
Well, you see, I applied for a job that I saw advertised last month. But you didn’t get it?
No, I phoned first and then I wrote a longer leter. And the letter that I got back was just a photocopy ! It said that the job that I wanted had already been given to someone inside the company.
But you thought
that it was still vacant?
Yes, the person who
spoke to me on the phone told me the
post was vacant.
How annoying?
Instead of that we can use which; instead of who we can use that . If, and only if, the subordinate clause (In italics in the examples) has a subject within it, we can omit who or that.
Is everything is OK with our order?
No, the
documents (that/which) you mailed to us last week haven’t arrived.
Can I discuss
the matter with someone else, please?
No, I’m afraid
the person who/that knows about this is not available right now.
Whom is more common in
formal writing than in conversation.
We might write
but we’d say:
The person to
whom you spoke was … The person you
spoke to was ..
The people with
whom I am working .. The people I’m
working with …
The man from
whom I received the letter.. The man I
got the letter from ..
Non Identifying Relative Clause
These
are used to give more information about a known person or thing. They are more common in writing than in
speech – again, notice the use
of commas:
Alex, who wrote to you about this, is no longer
wit our firm.
Getting a good
job, which
everyone has a right to, is not easy.
The application
form, which is enclosed with
this letter, must be returned to us by April 24.
Please telephone
Maska, whose extension number is
999.
Mr Gay, to whom
you spoke yesterday, is our Personnel Manager.
Three directors of PT. STAR are
discussing the financial situation of
their company. Marga is the firm’s chairman; his brother Maska, managing
director; Ira is company secretary.
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