Grammatical
Summary
Relative Clause
Description
A relative clause is a grammatical structure
that is embedded somewhere inside a sentence. The
relative clause cannot stand on its own. Instead, it is contained
by another sentence constituent, usually a noun phrase. Like
all clauses, a relative clause must have at least a subject
and a verb and may have an object and other grammatical phrases
as well.
In the following sentence the underlined relative
clause has a subject (which), a verb (has), and an object (a
solid state image sensor).
The relative clause is contained inside the
main clause portion, A
camera
is a digital camera. Specifically,
it is contained inside the noun phrase a
camera to form a larger noun phrase, a
camera which has a solid-state image sensor.