Exercise 1. Pick out the attributive clause and classify the clauses into restrictive and non-restrictive ones.

1.I asked reluctantly her to sit down. We had never been friends since the night she was taken ill (Greene). 2. He is a person who is easily deceived (Carter). 3. I speak as one who has led a sheltered, privileged life (Greene). 4. In the window, whose curtains were not drawn , I saw the Park prematurely grey (Shaw). 5. I remembered back to the day when a skinny young man had helped to carry their furniture back into the house after the eviction (Carter). 6. All she had done was slam the door in his face (Carter). 7. This was the moment you/d been looking forward to (Greene). 8. He began to cough and under his pyjama jacket, which had lost two buttons, the tight skin twanged like a drum (Greene). 9. Ellen sat listening, which she had did so very well (Crane). 10. There was a feeling in the air and a look on the faces that he did nit kike (Galsworthy). 11. I’m used to London, you see, where people live pretty thick on the ground (Sayers). 12. As I was going through the book department, I was surprised to meet an old friend of mine, whom I hadn’t seen for years (Linclater). 13. Everything that I did that evening took a long time (Greene). 14. He occasionally had toothache, which made him restless (Sayers). 15. Leonardo da Vinci is among the most complete men who had ever lived (Cox).