Using Which and That - Grammar Rules & Examples

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In summary, "which" is used to add extra information, while "that" is used to specify a specific thing or group. In the conversation, the correct usage of "which" and "that" is discussed, along with examples and explanations from Strunk & White's "Elements of Style" and the Oxford Dictionary. The importance of using the correct word is emphasized, as grammatical errors can not only be distracting, but also change the meaning of a sentence.
  • #1
Monique
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What are the rules for the usage of which and that? I am reading a book that (<- :wink: ) I think is littered with this grammatical error. How should the words be used correctly and are the following sentences wrong?


Any variation which is not inherited is unimportant for us.

I cannot here give the details which I have collected and elsewhere published on this curious subject.

When we compare the individuals of the same variety or sub-variety of our older cultivated plants and animals, one of the first points which strikes us is, that they generally differ more from each other than do the individuals of anyone species or variety in a state of nature.
 
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  • #3
According to Strunk & White's "Elements of Style", "that' is the defining, or restrictive, pronoun, 'which' the nondefining, or unrestrictive." Restrictive pronouns limit or define, unrestrictive don't. Unrestrictive clauses add information and are parenthetic (usually set off by commas). For example:

The lawn mower that is broken is in the garage. (Tells which lawn mower.)

The lawn mower, which is broken, is in the garage. (Adds a fact about the only lawn mower in question.)

It seems the usage in the first and third quotes are wrong, but I could see the second working either way. I don't usually pay much attention to which one I use. Maybe I'll start now.
 
  • #4
Great link, Ape!
So, according to Fowler's rule, we should say:
Any variation THAT is not inherited is unimportant for us.

The second is trickier:
I cannot here give the details THAT I have collected and elsewhere published on this curious subject.

Here, "that" emphasizes that it is the details you've actually collected you cannot give; other details on the curious subject are not referred to in this context (the sentence refers to some (restricted) subset of details).
He MIGHT, however, continue by giving out further details which he hasn't previously collected&published without contradicting himself.


I cannot here give the details, WHICH I have collected and elsewhere published, on this curious subject.

This seems to say that the speaker has collected all relevant details on the subject, has as it happens, collected and published them somewhere else, but for some reason can't give them right now.

In this case, the speaker cannot proceed to give any details on the subject without contradicting himself..


Perhaps I'm wrong, though..
 
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  • #5
arildno said:
Perhaps I'm wrong, though..
I'd say you're spot on. The context may hold the key.
Yeah, there's a ton of great information on worldwidewords. There's a great section of weird words where I found my current favorite: callipygian. :approve:
 
  • #6
Monique said:
What are the rules for the usage of which and that? I am reading a book ...
Any variation which is not inherited is unimportant for us.
I cannot here give the details which I have collected and elsewhere published on this curious subject.
...ore from each other than do the individuals of anyone species or variety in a state of nature.

Oh, no please Monique..., :wink:
Not all people who could write books are from English-speaking countries, I think you only need to get the ideas to then move on your own way...:blushing:, and in case you find several ideas that fit your mood, don't try to change it or you will only contradict yourself.
 
  • #7
:bugeye: any person who writes a text that is to be published, should make sure that there are no spelling or grammatical errors in it. You learn from mistakes of others, so that when you write a text or when you speak to others you will use the language correctly.
 
  • #8
And to add to that: it is really distracting to read a text with grammatical errors, they draw your attention from the content. The author of the book is excused btw, it seems that the rules for which/that were not yet established in 1909 (when the book was first published). I do find it strange that they did not correct the grammar in later editions.
 
  • #9
haha well you should check out the Oxford Dictionary.
Absoultely riddled with grammatical errors and style errors.
It doesn't even limit itself to those two areas...it somehow manages to get everything wrong :)
Well everything is an exaggeration, but it is pretty poor all the same.
 
  • #10
If I am not mistaken, Oxford Dictionary won't have such information as grammar for you to check out.
I also admit it too is pretty poor in the styles of expressions, hmmm...the same, similarity I believe. :wink:
 
  • #11
Yes, the dictionary does still have grammatical errors. :)
By style I refer to the more pedantic guidelines that should be followed.
It generally has to do with consistency mainly.
 
  • #12
Monique said:
And to add to that: it is really distracting to read a text with grammatical errors, they draw your attention from the content. The author of the book is excused btw, it seems that the rules for which/that were not yet established in 1909 (when the book was first published). I do find it strange that they did not correct the grammar in later editions.

Worse than being distracting, they can confuse the meaning of the sentence.

Any variation which is not inherited is unimportant for us.

That sentence is clearly wrong. It should be: "Any variation that is not inherited is unimportant for us." "Is not inherited" is a conditional requirement of "variation" to make the statement true.

I cannot here give the details which I have collected and elsewhere published on this curious subject.

As mentioned above, this example is harder to assess, and is a good example of why one needs to use the correct word, "which" or "that."

The first option is: "I cannot here give the details, which I have collected and elsewhere published, on this curious subject."

In this case, the author is saying they can't give details. The clause "I have collected elsewhere and published," is not a required modifier of "details," but is additional information. Think of something that begins with "which" as an aside. It's extra information that doesn't change the meaning of the sentence. You should be able to write the sentence without that clause and still have the original meaning intact: "I cannot here give the details on this curious subject." (And oh, by the way, those details are collected and published elsewhere, in case you're interested.)

The other option is: "I cannot here give the details that I have collected and elsewhere published on this curious subject."

In this second example, the phrase "I have collected and elsewhere published on this curious subject" modifies "details." It is a required part of the sentence to clarify a specific type of detail that is not going to be included. The details that have not been published elsewhere, or that have not been collected by this author, can be given, but not those collected by this author and published elsewhere.

There are a few other grammatical curiousities in that second example. The author says he "cannot" give the details. This may be true if he has published the details previously and does not have permission from the original publisher to include them in this later publication. But, more likely, he has "chosen not to" give the details, perhaps because it would make the book overly long, or would be a tangent or distraction from the main point.

There is also some awkward construction in the order of the words in "I cannot here give..." and "...elsewhere published..." Those parts of the sentence would be better written, "I cannot give here.." and "...published elsewhere..."

It seems this author had a pretty lousy editor if they didn't catch grammatical errors that are this blatant.
 
  • #13
Who wrote the book?

Ernest Hemingway decided he didn't like the word 'which' and he always used the word 'that.' I don't know why he would decide that was better than which, but he was an excentric man.

If you can get away with it then use whatever words you like. Society will follow. It happens all the time. Keeps lanuage from getting stagnant.
 
  • #14
honestrosewater said:
There's a great section of weird words where I found my current favorite: callipygian. :approve:
That's possibly Wodehouse's favorite too...
 
  • #15
Huckleberry said:
Who wrote the book?
Charles Darwin, it's the Origin of Species. It had been standing in my bookcase for a few years now, so I decided that as a biologist it was time for me to start reading it. It's nice to read it, considering that DNA was not discovered yet at that time. Darwin starts describing some laws of inheritance, which he discerned correctly, but how those laws were dictated was still a puzzle :smile:

btw, it is amazing how much biology has progressed in the last 50 years.
 
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  • #16
honestrosewater said:
According to Strunk & White's "Elements of Style", "that' is the defining, or restrictive, pronoun, 'which' the nondefining, or unrestrictive." Restrictive pronouns limit or define, unrestrictive don't. Unrestrictive clauses add information and are parenthetic (usually set off by commas).
I'm glad you quoted this, and I'm glad Monique raised the question. I think my usage of "which" and "that" is usually correct, but I would have been hard pressed to explain, even to myself, why one sounds correct to me in a given situation, and the other doesn't. They aren't interchangable and the distinction is important.
 
  • #17
Monique said:
so I decided that as a biologist... ...considering that DNA was not...
Are you sure that isn't:
...so I decided which as a biologist... ...considering which DNA was not... :wink:
 
  • #18
Gokul43201 said:
That's possibly Wodehouse's favorite too...
I found a writer Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse. Is this who you mean? I hadn't heard of him, but his stories sound funny. Are they good?
zoobyshoe said:
I'm glad you quoted this, and I'm glad Monique raised the question. I think my usage of "which" and "that" is usually correct, but I would have been hard pressed to explain, even to myself, why one sounds correct to me in a given situation, and the other doesn't. They aren't interchangable and the distinction is important.
Okay, here's a related question. I remember annoying my 5th grade teacher by always pointing out when "that" was left out of a sentence, e.g., "Mary sold the cookies [that] she baked." She always said it didn't need correcting. Who was right? Either of us? I suppose "which" would also work, but I'm more interested in whether the sentence needs correcting. I'm not sure how all the phrases work. I just notice that "she brought him the cookies" and "she baked" are independent clauses, but I don't know if this is an exception.
 
  • #19
honestrosewater said:
I found a writer Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse. Is this who you mean? I hadn't heard of him, but his stories sound funny. Are they good?
P.G. Wodehouse is pretty funny, if you like that sort of humor.

Okay, here's a related question. I remember annoying my 5th grade teacher by always pointing out when "that" was left out of a sentence, e.g., "Mary sold the cookies [that] she baked." She always said it didn't need correcting. Who was right? Either of us?
Here, again, I know she was right, but I can't explain why it's desireable to leave "that" out in that case. Best I can do is to say it's a leaner, trimmer, more readable sentence without the "that."
I suppose "which" would also work...
"Mary sold the cookies which she baked."
Sounds awkward.
 
  • #20
zoobyshoe said:
Here, again, I know she was right, but I can't explain why it's desireable to leave "that" out in that case. Best I can do is to say it's a leaner, trimmer, more readable sentence without the "that."
Yeah, I guess [that] communication is a rather important part of language. :bugeye: I still wish [that] I could find a rule. :biggrin:
 
  • #21
honestrosewater said:
Yeah, I guess [that] communication is a rather important part of language. :bugeye: I still wish [that] I could find a rule. :biggrin:
Okay, this is embarrassing. I posted a response to your original about your teacher, and just now realized that it didn't register. I was a bit rushed at the time, so didn't check. I must have hit the wrong spot with my mouse or something. Anyhow, you were right and your teacher was an idiot. In common speaking, the 'thats' are usually omitted, and I do so in conversational writing as in these forums. In proper writing, however, they are mandatory. It just becomes so unwieldy that most people ignore it, and most writers deliberately avoid it. It's one of those situations where following the rules is counter-productive.
 
  • #22
Ah, vindicated after all these years. It just would have been nice if she explained how or why they can be omitted (http://www.iei.uiuc.edu/structure/Structure1/adjclause.html ) instead of saying [that] sometimes they can and sometimes they can't (which isn't very helpful!). Heh, I don't think [that] I've ever really noticed how often they're omitted. Anyway, every other place [that] I checked said pretty much the same thing- let your ear be your guide.
 
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  • #23
honestrosewater said:
I found a writer Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse. Is this who you mean? I hadn't heard of him, but his stories sound funny. Are they good?
Wodehouse is sheer genius...nothing less.
 

Related to Using Which and That - Grammar Rules & Examples

1. What is the difference between "which" and "that" in grammar?

"Which" and "that" are both relative pronouns used to introduce dependent clauses in a sentence. The main difference between them is that "which" is used to provide non-essential or additional information, while "that" is used to provide essential information. In other words, "which" is used for non-restrictive clauses and "that" is used for restrictive clauses.

2. Can "which" and "that" be used interchangeably?

No, "which" and "that" cannot be used interchangeably. As mentioned earlier, "which" is used for non-restrictive clauses and "that" is used for restrictive clauses. Using them interchangeably can change the meaning of the sentence and make it grammatically incorrect.

3. How do I know when to use "which" and when to use "that" in a sentence?

One way to determine whether to use "which" or "that" is to ask yourself if the information provided by the dependent clause is necessary for understanding the sentence. If it is necessary, use "that". If it is additional or non-essential information, use "which". Additionally, "that" is usually used in American English while "which" is more commonly used in British English.

4. Can "which" and "that" be used for both people and things?

Yes, "which" and "that" can be used for both people and things. They are used to introduce dependent clauses that provide more information about the subject of the sentence, regardless of whether it is a person or a thing.

5. Are there any exceptions to the rule of using "which" and "that"?

Yes, there are some exceptions to the rule. One exception is when "that" is used in non-restrictive clauses to avoid repetition in a sentence. Another exception is when "which" is used in restrictive clauses to introduce a prepositional phrase. In both cases, the use of "which" and "that" may depend on the style guide being followed or personal preference.

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