A clause is a group of words that have a subject and a predicate and is used as a sentence or part of a sentence.
What is a noun clause?
And which clauses should be matched with and who clauses.
There are two kinds of clauses and three types of clauses in the English language. The two kinds are independent and dependent. An independent clause consists of a subject and a predicate that represent a complete thought. Dependent clauses depend on independent clauses to make complete sense. the three dependent clauses are noun clauses, adjective clauses, and adverb clauses.
Exemption clauses are the problem, it is not the nature
a complete subject and a complete predicate
A simple sentence.
What is the word that joins clauses called
A conjunction, a coordinate one for independent clauses and a subordinate one for dependent clauses.
Yes, introductory participal phrases and adverb clauses are set off from main clauses by commas
There are two dependent clauses.
relative clauses also referred to as?
The three dress-ups in writing are: 1. "who-which" clauses 2. "ly" clauses 3. "because" clauses
dependent clauses