Relative Clauses and Pronouns

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Across
  1. 2. Plural dative relative pronoun.
  2. 6. Feminine or plural nominative/accusative relative pronoun.
  3. 7. Masculine or neuter dative relative pronoun.
  4. 8. Neuter nominative/accusative relative pronoun.
  5. 9. Case used when the relative pronoun is the subject of the relative clause.
  6. 10. The noun that the relative clause refers back to.
  7. 13. In a German relative clause, this goes to the end.
  8. 14. A clause that gives more information about a noun.
  9. 15. The person or thing receiving the action in a clause.
  10. 17. Punctuation mark used before and after many relative clauses.
  11. 19. Relative pronoun meaning “whose” for feminine or plural nouns.
  12. 20. Case often used after prepositions like mit, bei, or zu.
Down
  1. 1. Masculine nominative relative pronoun.
  2. 3. Where the conjugated verb goes in a German relative clause.
  3. 4. A subordinate clause where the conjugated verb usually goes at the end.
  4. 5. Case used to show possession, as with dessen or deren.
  5. 8. Masculine accusative relative pronoun.
  6. 11. The person or thing doing the action in a clause.
  7. 12. A word like der, die, das, den, dem, or denen that starts a relative clause.
  8. 16. Relative pronoun meaning “whose” for masculine or neuter nouns.
  9. 18. Case used when the relative pronoun is the direct object.