Relative Clauses
Klausa Relatif
Relative Clauses in Indonesian
Overview
Indonesian relative clauses are formed with the word yang, which serves as a universal relative pronoun meaning "who," "which," "that," or "the one that." Unlike English, which has multiple relative pronouns (who, which, that, whose, whom), Indonesian uses yang for all of them, making the system remarkably simple.
Yang introduces a clause that modifies a noun, providing additional information about it. Orang yang datang means "the person who came." Buku yang saya baca means "the book that I read." The word yang can also stand alone to mean "the one that" — Yang mana? (Which one?).
How It Works
Basic Structure
| Pattern | Example | English |
|---|---|---|
| Noun + yang + verb | orang yang datang | the person who came |
| Noun + yang + subject + verb | buku yang saya baca | the book that I read |
| Noun + yang + adjective | rumah yang besar | the house that is big |
| Yang + verb/adjective | Yang datang siapa? | Who is the one who came? |
Yang as Subject or Object
| Role of yang | Example | English |
|---|---|---|
| Subject | Orang yang tinggal di sini. | The person who lives here. |
| Object | Buku yang saya baca. | The book that I read. |
| Adjective modifier | Makanan yang enak. | The food that is delicious. |
Yang as Independent Pronoun
| Indonesian | English |
|---|---|
| Yang mana? | Which one? |
| Yang ini. | This one. |
| Yang merah. | The red one. |
| Yang baru. | The new one. |
Examples in Context
| Indonesian | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Orang yang tinggal di sini. | The person who lives here. | Yang as subject |
| Buku yang saya baca. | The book that I read. | Yang as object |
| Restoran yang kita kunjungi. | The restaurant we visited. | Yang as object |
| Alasan yang dia berikan. | The reason he gave. | Yang as object |
| Dia yang paling pintar. | He is the smartest one. | Yang as nominalizer |
| Ini yang saya mau. | This is what I want. | Yang for "what" |
| Mobil yang warna merah itu. | That car which is red. | Yang + adjective |
| Orang yang saya kenal. | The person I know. | Yang as object |
| Yang penting, kamu sehat. | What's important is that you're healthy. | Yang as subject |
| Film yang bagus. | A good movie. | Yang + adjective |
Common Mistakes
Omitting yang when it is needed
- Wrong: Orang datang itu siapa?
- Right: Orang yang datang itu siapa?
- Why: When a clause modifies a noun, yang is required to introduce the relative clause.
Using different words for "who" and "which"
- Wrong: Looking for separate words like English "who" vs. "which"
- Right: Yang covers all: people, things, and concepts
- Why: Indonesian uses the single word yang for all relative pronouns.
Confusing yang with itu
- Wrong: Buku itu saya baca bagus. (That book I read is good)
- Right: Buku yang saya baca itu bagus. (The book that I read is good)
- Why: Yang introduces the relative clause; itu can follow to mark definiteness but does not replace yang.
Usage Notes
Yang is one of the most frequent words in Indonesian. Beyond relative clauses, it functions as a nominalizer (yang penting — what's important), a focus marker (dia yang datang — it's he who came), and a substitute for a noun (yang ini — this one). Mastering yang is essential for both understanding and producing natural Indonesian at any level.
Practice Tips
- Practice building relative clauses by adding descriptions to nouns: orang → orang yang tinggi → orang yang tinggi dan ramah. Chain multiple yang clauses for complex descriptions.
- Use yang as "the one" in daily conversation: Yang mana? (Which one?), Yang ini atau yang itu? (This one or that one?).
Related Concepts
- Basic Verb Structure — the verb patterns used within relative clauses
- Indirect Speech — another type of embedded clause
Prerequisite
Basic Verb StructureA1Concepts that build on this
More B1 concepts
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