"Eventually the star will return to its same relative location at sunrise"
The grocery store is located next to the library.
The relative location of my house is Marietta county.
People would have to use a map.
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance".This relative clause functions as an appositive (a word or phrase renaming something earlier in the sentence). This relative clause 'relates' to the noun 'worry', the subject of the sentence.
when you go to your friends house
The sentence contains the relative clause "that he would use up his inheritance", which relates to the subject noun "worry".
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance", a relative clause which relates to the subject noun "worry".
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance", a relative clause which relates to the subject noun "worry".
No! Location is a noun and as a subject would have no predicate.However, there is one form, the proverbial "Location. Location. Location."Here, each use is not a sentence, but the punchline of an implied message, that being the aphorism "In real estate, there are three important factors : location, location, location."
I am the sole living relative
I have a relative of some sort that lives in Seattle.
There are two forms of locations that geographers use. They are relative location and absolute location. Relative location stated in terms of its distance and direction from something else. Absolute location is the geographic coordinate of something.