Year 8
Lesson details
Key learning points
- In this lesson, we will look at relative pronouns in the nominative case.
Licence
This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.
Loading...
8 Questions
Q1.
In the sentence: 'I found the man, who took my dog.' Is 'who' a relative pronoun, a relative clause or an antecedent?
antecedent
relative clause
Q2.
In the sentence: 'I found the man, who took my dog.' Is 'man' a relative pronoun, a relative clause or an antecedent?
relative clause
relative pronoun
Q3.
In the sentence: 'I found the man, who took my dog.' Is 'who took my dog' a relative pronoun, a relative clause or an antecedent?
antecedent
relative pronoun
Q4.
Which THREE of these words are Latin relative pronouns?
quid
quoque
Q5.
What TWO things can quod mean?
what
who
why
Q6.
What does the following sentence mean: rex, qui sedet, cives salutat?
The king, who greets the citizens, sits.
Q7.
What does the following sentence mean: rex cives, qui sunt laeti, salutat?
The king's citizens, who are happy, greet.
Q8.
What does the following sentence mean: rex, quod fessus est, dormit?
The king, who is tired, sleeps.