Everything not introduced by a co-ordinating conjunction (co-ordinators or coordinators) or a punctuation mark (i.e. a comma) is a subordinate clause (introduce by conjunctions like whereas, as because, or relative pronouns such as who, that, which, or relative adverbs like when, where, whenever, etc.
Identify the main clause in the sentence below. Then decide if the subordinate clause is used as noun adjective or adverb. After we have read the story we will talk about it. Main clause Subordinate c?
a clause that modify or identify a noun or a noun phrase is called NC in apposition
Subordinate clause: whose bravery won many victories. Type: Adjective clause modifying "hero." Subordinate clause: who rea. Type: Incomplete subordinate clause.
Please provide the sentences you are referring to so I can identify the one with the underlined adjective clause.
The subordinate clause in a passage typically adds extra information to the main clause and cannot stand alone as a complete sentence. You can identify a subordinate clause by looking for words like although, because, when, if, or which that signal the clause's dependency on the main clause.
To identify the sentence with the subordinate clause underlined, please provide the sentences you're referring to. Once you do, I can help you determine which one contains the subordinate clause.
The noun clause is 'why the tornado formed', functioning as the object of the verb 'understands'.
"Christine blew out the candles on the cake" - independent clause "and opened her presents" - dependent clause
It is a subordinate clause
Identify the subject and the verb and make sure their is a clear thought.
The adjective clause is in bold: "He is the one for whom the message was intended.", used to describe the predicate nominative 'one'.
The subordinating conjunction in the sentence "Where there is smoke there is fire" is "where." It introduces the dependent clause "where there is smoke," which provides additional information about the main clause "there is fire."