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Relative pronouns are clue words for adjective clauses.
The three types of dependent clauses are adjective, adverb, and noun
You have to determine what word or group of words the clause is modifying: adjective clauses modify nouns and pronouns while adverb clauses modify verbs, adjectives and adverbs.
No, "and" is not an adjective. The word "and" is a conjunction. It is used to connect words, phrases, or clauses.
Both adjectives and adjective clauses modify nouns to give more information about them. However, adjectives are single words that directly modify nouns, while adjective clauses are groups of words that act as one unit and function as adjectives in a sentence. Adjective clauses usually contain a subject and a verb and cannot stand alone as complete sentences.
No, adjective clauses modify nouns. The only things adjectives modify are nouns and pronouns.
1. adjective clauses 2. phrases 3. appositives 4. adverb 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.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a pronoun. It can be used (like who) to introduce adjective clauses.
Definitely not verbs. I just took a quiz on that...
The term "relative adjective" can refer to the "relative pronouns" that introduce adjective clauses. These are who/whom, whoever/whomever, whose, that, and which (and in some circumstances when, where, or what). For example, the adjective clause in "That is the car that I saw."
There are three main types of noun clauses: that-clauses, wh-clauses, and if/whether-clauses. That-clauses begin with "that" (e.g., "I believe that he is right"), wh-clauses start with words like "who," "what," "when," "where," "why," or "how" (e.g., "I wonder who won the game"), and if/whether-clauses introduce choices or possibilities (e.g., "She asked whether we could go home early").