100. My cousin, ___ lives in Canada, is visiting us next month.
a) which b) who c) that
b) who
100. Our manager, ___ usually replies late, answered in one minute today.
a) who b) which c) that
a) who
100. Dushanbe, ___ I grew up, has changed a lot.
a) which b) when c) where
c) where
100. My phone, ___ screen is cracked, still works perfectly.
a) who b) whose c) which
b) whose
100. The old market, ___ roof was repaired last year, is busy again.
a) which b) that c) whose
c) whose
200. My uncle, who owns a small café, knows everyone in town.
a) extra information about my uncle b) the only uncle I have never met c) a question
a) extra information about my uncle
200. The app, which I use every day, suddenly stopped working.
a) The app is one of many and must be identified. b) The app is not important. c) “which I use every day” adds extra information.
c) “which I use every day” adds extra information.
200. Last summer, when I visited Samarkand, I took hundreds of photos.
a) extra time information b) defining which summer only c) wrong because “when” cannot be used
a) extra time information
200. I lost my keys again, ___ made me late.
a) who b) that c) which
c) which
200. My English teacher, who I respect a lot, gave me honest advice.
a) wrong because “whom” is always required b) acceptable casual English c) defining relative clause
b) acceptable casual English
300. My sister, ___ car broke down yesterday, took a taxi today.
a) who b) which c) whose
c) whose
300. The group chat, ___ everyone shares homework, is too noisy.
a) which b) where c) where
c) where
300. The hotel, ___ we stayed for two nights, was surprisingly cheap.
a) which b) where c) whose
b) where
300. ❌ My bike, I bought last month, already needs repair.
a) My bike, which I bought last month, already needs repair. b) My bike, that I bought last month, already needs repair. c) My bike which bought last month already needs repair.
a) My bike, which I bought last month, already needs repair.
300. Which sentence is wrong for a non-defining clause?
a) My car, which is old, still runs well. b) My friend, who lives nearby, came over. c) My house, that is near the school, is small.
c) My house, that is near the school, is small.
400. ❌ My brother that lives in Khujand is coming tonight.
a) My brother lives in Khujand, that is coming tonight. b) My brother, who lives in Khujand, is coming tonight. c) My brother, lives in Khujand, is coming tonight.
b) My brother, who lives in Khujand, is coming tonight.
400. ❌ The laptop, that I bought last year, is already slow.
a) The laptop, which I bought last year, is already slow. b) The laptop, that I bought last year is already slow. c) The laptop which I bought last year is already slow.
a) The laptop, which I bought last year, is already slow.
400. The taxi driver, who had clearly worked all night, still smiled.
a) The clause identifies which taxi driver from many. b) The clause is a command. c) The clause gives extra information about him.
c) The clause gives extra information about him.
400. My neighbour, to ___ I sometimes give vegetables, brought me bread today.
a) whom b) whom c) which
b) whom
400. She failed the test, which surprised everyone.
a) The whole situation surprised everyone. b) The test surprised only itself. c) “which” means “where”
a) The whole situation surprised everyone.
500. My grandma forgot my birthday again, ___ was a bit funny.
a) who b) that c) which
c) which
500. My boss ignored my message, which annoyed me.
a) “which” refers only to “message” b) “which” refers to the whole previous idea c) “which” means “who”
b) “which” refers to the whole previous idea
500. Which punctuation is correct?
a) Paris which I visited once, felt smaller. b) Paris, which I visited once, felt smaller than I expected. c) Paris, which I visited once felt smaller.
b) Paris, which I visited once, felt smaller than I expected.
500. In casual speech, “my neighbour, who I sometimes give vegetables to” is:
a) natural informal English b) impossible English c) only for objects, not people
a) natural informal English
500. The reason, for which he refused the offer, sounded weak.
a) wrong in formal English b) formal but correct c) only correct without commas
b) formal but correct