A Student's Introduction to English Grammar

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Prescriptive grammar note

§4 Fused relatives 191

Some prescriptive usage books and style guides insist that integrated (or 'defining' or
'restrictive') relative clauses with non-personal heads should never be of the wh type -
that is, that an integrated relative should not begin with which. We have paid no attention
to this so far (the second example in this chapter, [lii], is an integrated relative with
which). Our reason is that the suggested restriction has no basis; no one who looked at the
evidence could continue to believe in it. Integrated wh relatives with non-personal heads
have been occurring in impeccable English for about 400 years. Among the most famous
cases are sentences that everyone will recall hearing, such as Render therefo re unto Cae­
sar the things which are Caesar's (the King James Bible, 1611), and a date which will live
in infamy (Franklin D. Roosevelt's often misquoted remark about the day of the 1941
Pearl Harbor attack). Those who recommend against integrated which often turn out to
use it in their own writing (one usage expert said 'I recommend using that with defining
clauses', but then wrote a typical situation which a practiced writer corrects on the very
next page!). Integrated relatives with which are grammatical in all varieties of English,
and the notion that there is something wrong with them is just an invention of prescrip­
tivists.

4 Fused relatives


The final relative construction we consider in this chapter is the fused
relative, illustrated in [19]:


[ 19] i Whoever said that was trying to mislead you. }
ii I've eaten what you gave me.

[fused relatives]

This is a more complex construction than those dealt with above. Here the
antecedent and the relativised element are fused together instead of being expressed
separately as in simpler constructions. The underlined expressions here are thus
NPs whose head is fused with the first element in the relative clause.


Whoever in [i] is simultaneously head of the NP and subject of the relative
clause, and its gender indicates that we are talking about some person. The mean­
ing is thus comparable to that of the non-fused The person who said that was
trying to mislead you.
What in [ii] is likewise head of the NP and object of gave in the relative clause,
and the non-personal gender gives a meaning like that of the non-fused (and
more formal) I've eaten that which you gave me.

Relative words in the fused construction


The major relative words that occur in this construction are as follows:


[20] who
11 whoever

whom
whomever

what
whatever

which
whichever

where
wherever

when
whenever
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