An internal relative clause, also known as a center-embedded relative clause, is a grammatical construction where the head noun that the relative clause modifies is itself part of the relative clause. This creates a nested structure that can sometimes be challenging to parse.
Consider the sentence: “The book that John read is on the table.” Here, “that John read” is a standard relative clause modifying “The book.” An internal relative clause would look like this:
“The book which the critics praised won an award.”
In this example:
Internal relative clauses, while less common than external ones, appear in various linguistic contexts:
The primary challenge is syntactic ambiguity and processing load. People often misinterpret the relationships between sentence elements. A common misconception is that the head noun must always precede the relative clause.
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