I'm sorry for the long title. I just want to be specific about what I want to know and for someone who probably are curious to know about this case, I wrote that.
Anyways, I'm interested about whether that is possible, and I'm not dealing with this case of emphasis sentences like "It was me who did that", I'm talking about normal sentences as below.
1. I was willing or unwilling to do anything, I was most certain that it was none but myself that was willing and unwilling..
2. ...never only went went to to confession, entertain themselves who did not by looking go to church...
3. Many also among them, who were overcome with sickness, when they saw that their sacrifices offered to idols in order to secure their recovery were of no avail ...
4. There was an element among them who were found trying to trick him and cause him to stumble as they sought his reaction on certain of the laws.
5. Soon after his return, some of them who were still partially ambulatory, started coming up to Richardson
6. They who were seeking my life wrought violence.
7. She who was confined to the house now travels freely.
8. I had Lucien against me, who was then minister of the interior.
9. he said; 'me, who was one of those so misguided as to complain, before the great lesson we have all received.
10. And then there was me—who was raised by a single mom and a babysitter
11. ..never only went went to to confession, entertain themselves who did not by looking go to church..
12. I, who was proud in mind and shared some ideas with Demian!
" be described by relative pronouns? You're asking whether personal and reflexive pronouns can be modified by relative clauses . Yes, they can.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
fire1 Can "he, she, they, ..." be described by relative pronouns?
You're asking whether personal and reflexive pronouns can be modified by relative clauses. Yes, they can.
If the pronoun makes a specific reference, the relative clause can only be non-restrictive, and it will therefore take a comma. I, me, and myself