A clause is exactly what your question explained.
For eg. I ran home while Mum is washing the dishes. The clause in that, in fact, there are two clauses in that sentence, the clauses are: Ran home and is washing the dishes.
An adverb clause is a dependent clause that provides more information about the verb in the main clause. It typically answers the questions of how, when, where, or to what extent something was done. For example, "She sang beautifully during the concert," where "during the concert" is the adverb clause indicating when.
Adverb
No, "heavily" is an adverb. It is used to describe how an action is done or to what extent something is done.
No, "thoroughly" is not a conjunction. It is an adverb that describes the extent or degree to which something is done.
"wide" is an adjective. An adjective is a describing word. Such as:BlackWideLongBigNewOldFastect, ect, ect.
"Longer" can be both an adjective and an adverb. As an adjective, it describes something that has more length than something else. As an adverb, it describes an action that is done for a longer duration or to a greater extent.
Yes, "available" can function as an adverb when used to describe the manner in which something is done or the extent to which something is accessible. For example, "the product is readily available."
An adverbial clause tells how, when, where, or to what extent.A clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb but is not a complete thought; not a complete sentence.An adverbial clause functions as a unit in a sentence as an adverb. An adverbial clause is a dependent clause.Example functions:He spoke to me as if I were a child. (how he spoke to me)You can go swimming after you finish your chores. (when you can go)You can may treasure in places you'd least expect. (where you may find treasure)I held my breath as long as I could. ( held to what extent)
Hardly is an adverb of degree; an adverb that tells the degree or extent to which something happens or is done.
It is an adverb. It tells how something is being done.
It is an adverb of manner. It tells how something was done.
A conditional verb is something like:Should have done thisWould have done thatThat's what I have heard.I think there are no conditional verbs but there are conditional sentences. egIf it rains we will get wet.The conditional clause begins with if and the main clause begins with we.The event in the main clause depends on the condition in the conditional clause.
A noun clause is a group of words that contains a noun or pronoun and a verb but is an incomplete thought that can't stand on it's own. A noun clause can perform the function of a noun as the subject of a sentence and the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:noun clause as subject: The man whose mailbox I hit was very nice about it.noun clause as object: My car is the one parked next to the fire hydrant.noun clause as subject and object: What you wantis the best quality that you can afford.
The beginnings of adverb clauses can differ a lot. However, you can spot an adverb clause by finding what the clause is modifying. If the clause in the sentence is modifying a verb, than it's an adverb clause. Also, adverb clauses will tell you: * When the action occurred * Where the action took place * To what extent the action was * How the action was done Make sure the clause is modifying a verb though, because often times it can be a prepositional phrase!
A lie a man tells his wife when he wants something done.
Tell them to get on the same page. Or ask them which task they would rather have done first.
No, "halfway" is not a noun. It is an adverb that describes something being done or reached to only a certain extent or point.
If a game tells you to go or do something do it and shouldn't you be out in the world having a life
what Rose Park did, I think did advance the civil rights movement. she did something no one else had done.