From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
This article is not about the legal concept of a restrictive covenant.
Should one use "that" or "which"? In syntax, the concepts of restrictive clause and non-restrictive clause can perhaps most easily be explained by contrasting two examples:
- The Washington Monument, which is 555 feet tall, is the tallest building in Washington.
- The house that was recently built is Senator Smith's house.
Some writers follow a normative rule that "which" should be used in non-restrictive clauses and "that" should be used in restrictive clauses. In this usage, the phrase
- the house that is green
- the house, which is green.
Most writers do not adhere to this rule, largely because the comma used with descriptive but not with restrictive clauses is sufficient for disambiguation in writing.

