Cover of the textbook Outcomes Upper-Intermediate - Student's Book

The key answer of exercise 7

The key to exercise solutions in chapter 2 - About town for the textbook Outcomes Upper-Intermediate - Student's Book with authors Hugh Dellar and Andrew Walkley from National Geographic Learning

Question

Look at the sentences from the conversation in Exercise 6. Then work in pairs to discuss the questions below.

Answer

  1. Sentences a, b and d
  2. a, b and d
  3. b (If the sentence already makes sense without the extra information, add a comma.)
  4. answers might include that, whose, whom, when, where, why.
  5. No. When we’re not using commas before the relative clauses – in other words, when we’re using defining relative clauses – the relative pronoun can be left out if the pronoun is the object of the relative clause, e.g. Where’s that money (that / which) I lent you yesterday – I lent you the money, so that / which is the object of this clause.

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