1. Nouns with Relative Pronouns:
* Relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that) introduce relative clauses, which provide additional information about a noun. For example:
* The woman who lives next door is a doctor. ("who lives next door" modifies "woman")
In this case, "woman" is the noun and "who" is the relative pronoun. It's not technically a "relative noun", but the pronoun is related to the noun it modifies.
2. Nouns used in Relative Clauses:
* Relative clauses can also contain nouns that are not the main noun of the sentence. For example:
* I bought the car that you recommended. ("car" is the object of the relative clause)
Here, "car" is a noun within the relative clause, but it's not the noun being modified by the clause.
3. Nouns with Adjective Clauses:
* Adjective clauses are similar to relative clauses, but they are introduced by a relative adverb (where, when, why) instead of a pronoun. For example:
* The place where we met is still my favorite restaurant. ("where we met" modifies "place")
In this case, "place" is the noun, and "where" is the relative adverb introducing the adjective clause.
In summary:
* There is no grammatical term "relative noun".
* You might be thinking about nouns used with relative pronouns or relative adverbs, which function as parts of relative or adjective clauses.
If you can provide more context or an example of what you're looking for, I might be able to give you a more specific answer.