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  2. A relative pronoun is a pronoun which introduces a relative clause. Examples are: who, whom, which and whose. That is also sometimes used to introduce a relative clause. The use of a relative pronoun is usually optional in English. In informal English, it is usually omitted.

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    • Examples of Relative Adverbs
    • More Examples of Relative Adverbs
    • Examples of Relative Adverbs in Quotations
    • More About Relative Adverbs

    "Where" 1. I know the town where you live. "When" 1. They're talking about an era when a promise was a promise. "Why" 1. It is the reason why I left.

    The seat where we sat last Saturdayis still free.
    I can remember a time when I could eat four hamburgers.
    We do not know the reason why he left.
    We do not know why he left.
    There is a time when even justice brings harm. (Greek tragedian Sophocles)
    The abdomen is the reason why man does not readily take himself to be a god. (Philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche)
    I grew up in a place where the punk-rock kids fed the homeless in the town square. (Guitarist Justin Sane)
    I am parked near the pier wherewe caught the conger eel.
    I am parked near the pier on whichwe caught the conger eel.
    I remember the era whenteachers could give students the cane.
    I remember the era during whichteachers could give students the cane.
  3. Relative pronouns introduce relative clauses. The most common relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, that. The relative pronoun we use depends on what we are referring to and the type of relative clause.

  4. A relative clause can be introduced by either a relative pronoun or a relative adverb. A relative clause can be restrictive or nonrestrictive (essential or nonessential) Restrictive relative clauses restrict or define the meaning of a noun and are not set apart by commas.

  5. Apr 9, 2019 · Richard Nordquist. Updated on April 09, 2019. A relative adverb is an adverb (where, when, or why) that introduces a relative clause, which is sometimes called a relative adverb clause. Examples and Observations.

  6. All of your examples are relative clauses but you have two different grammatical items within them: that/who/which are examples of relative pronouns; where/when are examples of relative adverbs. Generally speaking, you can replace a relative adverb with a relative pronoun plus an appropriate preposition, not just a relative pronoun.