That vs. which: Difference between revisions
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{{a|plainenglish|}}{{d| | {{a|plainenglish|}}{{d|That|/ðət/|Conj}}<br> | ||
{{d| | {{d|Which|/wɪʧ/|conj|}}<br> | ||
'''[[That]]''' is a [[conjunction]] introducing a ''restrictive'' subordinate clause: | '''[[That]]''' is a [[conjunction]] introducing a ''restrictive'' subordinate clause: |
Latest revision as of 15:16, 12 May 2021
Towards more picturesque speech™
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That
/ðət/ (Conj.)
Which
/wɪʧ/ (conj.)
That is a conjunction introducing a restrictive subordinate clause:
“I fed the cat that sat on the mat.” [implied: ... and I let the other one, which sat in the armchair, go hungry].
Which, by contrast, is a conjunction introducing a non-restrictive subordinate clause:
“The cat, which sat on the mat, had halitosis.” [Its halitosis was not contingent on its location mat-wise; indeed there could be an entirely distinct minty-breathed moggy sitting on the same mat, for all we know.]
Lesson: Get a dog.