Оригинал на английском:
40. Choose the right word to complete the sentences. What or that?
1. I did _ I was supposed to do. 2. I didn't buy anything because I didn't see _ I wanted to buy. 3. Jane told me _ she had been misinformed. 4. I am sure _ _ you say is true. 5. He wasn't surprised at _ he saw because I told him_ to expect. 6. Show me _ you've got in your hand. 7. _ always makes me feel better is a good song or a funny comedy. 8. The children never learned _ they had been adopted. 9. You'll never guess _ I'm thinking about at the moment. 10. The story _ she was told the other day captured her imagination. 11. I gave her just the money_ she needed. 12. I gave her _ she needed.
Focus on Syntax
RELATIVE CLAUSES
• When you mention someone or something in a sentence, you often want to give further information about them. One way to do this is to use a relative clause. You put a relative clause immediately after the noun which refers to the person, thing, or group you are talking about. Relative clauses have a similar function to adjectives.
E. g.
Meet Samantha, the girl I told you so much about.
This is the umbrella I bought yesterday.
• In relative clauses that is very often used instead of other relative pronouns, especially in a conversational style: Where's the girl that came here yesterday? (=...who came...)
He's the man that people like at first sight. (=...whom people like...)
She has boiled the potatoes that I bought in the morning. (=...which I bought...)
That is especially common after the following words:
all something any
little anything no
few nothing none
much every only
everything some
Is this all that is left?
The only thing that matters is to find our way home.
Have you found anything that belongs to me?
In conversational English that in such sentences is often left out.
He's a man people like at first sight.
Anything you say is all right with me.
Nothing you do will make any difference.
1. I did _ I was supposed to do. 2. I didn't buy anything because I didn't see _ I wanted to buy. 3. Jane told me _ she had been misinformed. 4. I am sure _ _ you say is true. 5. He wasn't surprised at _ he saw because I told him_ to expect. 6. Show me _ you've got in your hand. 7. _ always makes me feel better is a good song or a funny comedy. 8. The children never learned _ they had been adopted. 9. You'll never guess _ I'm thinking about at the moment. 10. The story _ she was told the other day captured her imagination. 11. I gave her just the money_ she needed. 12. I gave her _ she needed.
Focus on Syntax
RELATIVE CLAUSES
• When you mention someone or something in a sentence, you often want to give further information about them. One way to do this is to use a relative clause. You put a relative clause immediately after the noun which refers to the person, thing, or group you are talking about. Relative clauses have a similar function to adjectives.
E. g.
Meet Samantha, the girl I told you so much about.
This is the umbrella I bought yesterday.
• In relative clauses that is very often used instead of other relative pronouns, especially in a conversational style: Where's the girl that came here yesterday? (=...who came...)
He's the man that people like at first sight. (=...whom people like...)
She has boiled the potatoes that I bought in the morning. (=...which I bought...)
That is especially common after the following words:
all something any
little anything no
few nothing none
much every only
everything some
Is this all that is left?
The only thing that matters is to find our way home.
Have you found anything that belongs to me?
In conversational English that in such sentences is often left out.
He's a man people like at first sight.
Anything you say is all right with me.
Nothing you do will make any difference.