Let’s break this down clearly. Relative clauses—those bits of a sentence that give extra info about a noun—come in two flavours: defining (also called restrictive) and non-defining (non-restrictive). Commas depend on which type you’re dealing with and how the clause fits into the sentence. Here’s the rundown:
Defining Relative Clauses (No Commas)
- What they do: They pinpoint (or DEFINE) exactly which person, thing, or idea you’re talking about. Without them, the sentence would be vague or incomplete.
- Comma rule: No commas. The clause is essential, so it flows right into the sentence.
- Pronouns: Usually that, who, whom, or which (though that is common in informal English).
- Examples:
- “The book that I borrowed is on the table.”
(No commas—tells you which book.) - “People who live here are friendly.”
(No commas—specifies which people.) - “The car which she drives is red.”
(No commas—defines which car.)
- “The book that I borrowed is on the table.”
If you add commas here, it changes the meaning or sounds wrong. For instance, “The book, that I borrowed, is on the table” is incorrect because that doesn’t work with commas, and the clause is defining.
Non-Defining Relative Clauses (With Commas)
- What they do: They add extra, non-essential info. The sentence still makes sense without them—like a bonus detail.
- Comma rule: Use commas to set them off. Think of the commas as parentheses: the clause is detachable.
- Pronouns: Usually who, whom, or which (never that).
- Examples:
- “My sister, who lives in Paris, is visiting tomorrow.”
(Commas—extra info about a specific sister; the sentence works without it: “My sister is visiting tomorrow.”) - “This phone, which I bought last week, has a great camera.”
(Commas—adds a detail, but “This phone has a great camera” stands alone.) - “Mr. Jones, whom I met yesterday, is our new boss.”
(Commas—extra info about a known Mr. Jones.)
- “My sister, who lives in Paris, is visiting tomorrow.”
Without commas, it becomes defining and shifts the meaning. “My sister who lives in Paris is visiting” implies I have multiple sisters, and only the Paris one is coming.
Key Differences in Action
- Defining (no commas): “The man who robbed the bank was caught.”
(Which man? The one who robbed the bank—essential.) - Non-defining (with commas): “The man, who was tired, sat down.”
(We know who the man is; the tiredness is just extra.)
Tricky Bits
- Proper Nouns: Non-defining clauses often follow names (e.g., “Sarah, who loves coffee, smiled.”) because the name already identifies the person—no defining needed.
- That vs. Which: That is more commonly used for defining (no commas), but which can be used as well (particularly in British English): “The movie that I watched was great.” or “”The movie which I watched was great.” Which with commas is non-defining: “The movie, which I watched, was great.” That, on the other hand, cannot be used for non-defining sentences like this.
- Dropping the Pronoun: In defining clauses, you can skip the pronoun if it acts as the object of the clause (not the subject) (“The book I borrowed is great”), but never in non-defining ones.
Expanded Examples of when to drop and when to not drop the pronoun:
- Defining (Can Drop the Pronoun if Object):
- With pronoun: “The book that I read is fascinating.”
(Subject: “I”; object: “book” → that can be dropped.)
- With pronoun: “The book that I read is fascinating.”
- Without pronoun: “The book I read is fascinating.”
(Still clear, informal, correct.)
- Without pronoun: “The book I read is fascinating.”
- With pronoun: “The person whom she met is kind.”
(Subject: “she”; object: “person” → whom can be dropped.)
- With pronoun: “The person whom she met is kind.”
- Without pronoun: “The person she met is kind.”
(Correct, informal.)
- “The dog that chased the cat is mine.”
(Subject: “that” → can’t drop that: “The dog chased the cat is mine” is wrong.)
- Without pronoun: “The person she met is kind.”
- Non-Defining (Cannot Drop the Pronoun):
- With pronoun: “My dog, who loves to run, is playful.”
(Subject: “who”; object: “dog” → who is required; dropping it is incorrect: “My dog, loves to run, is playful” is wrong.) - With pronoun: “This car, which I bought, is fast.”
(Subject: “which”; object: “car” → which is required; dropping it is incorrect: “This car, I bought, is fast” is wrong.)
- With pronoun: “My dog, who loves to run, is playful.”
4. Multiple Relative Clauses in One Sentence: You can have both defining and non-defining clauses in the same sentence, but you need to use commas and pronouns correctly to avoid confusion.
Examples:
- “The book that I borrowed, which was written by a famous author, is on the shelf.”
(“That I borrowed” is defining, no commas, that—essential to identify the book. “Which was written…” is non-defining, with commas, which—extra info about the known book.) - “My friend John, who lives in London, who I met at university, is visiting.”
(Both are non-defining, with commas, who—extra details about a specific John.)
5. Ambiguous Nouns: Sometimes, a noun’s uniqueness isn’t clear, making it hard to decide if the clause is defining or non-defining.
Examples:
- “The teacher who teaches math is strict.”
(Defining, no commas—implies multiple teachers, specifying which one.) - “The teacher, who teaches math, is strict.”
(Non-defining, with commas—implies one teacher, and math teaching is extra info.)
Quick Recap
- If the clause answers “which one?” and you can’t remove it without confusion, it’s defining—no commas.
- If it’s just extra info and the sentence still stands alone, it’s non-defining—use commas.
So, commas are your clue: no commas = must-have info; commas = nice-to-know info.