Not usually. It's more common to use a comma. For example, in the sentence:
"If I have time, I'll go to the store." the "If I have time" phrase is the dependent clause as it cannot stand on its own and be a complete sentence. The independent clause is "I'll go to the store" as it's a complete sentence in its own right. Typically the two sentences are joined by a comma, although the word "then" can also be used (e.g., If I have time then I'll go to the store).
No, a semi-colon is used to separate two independent clauses that are closely related. To separate a dependent clause from an independent clause, you would typically use a comma or other punctuation marks.
Yes, a semicolon can be used to separate an independent clause from a dependent clause when the two clauses are closely related in meaning. However, it is more common to use a comma in this situation.
No, a comma is not used to separate a dependent clause and a verb. Instead, a comma is used to separate the dependent clause from the independent clause.
Use a semicolon to separate independent clauses. Use a comma followed by a coordinating conjunction (and, but, or) to join independent clauses. Place a period to create two separate sentences. Use a subordinating conjunction to turn one clause into a dependent clause.
Only an independent clause can stand independently. A dependent clause is dependent on an independent clause.
Independent clause: "I went to the store." Dependent clause: "Because it was raining."
I wouldn't use a semicolon in a conditional (if) sentence. Semicolons can join two independent clauses without a conjunction. The "if" clause in a conditional sentence is dependent, not independent.
Simple, compound, complex
A dependent clause is a group of words that has a subject and a verb but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it does not express a complete thought. An independent clause, on the other hand, is a group of words that has a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought, thus forming a complete sentence. Example: Dependent clause: "Although she was tired" - this phrase cannot stand alone as a complete sentence. Independent clause: "She went to bed early" - this phrase can stand alone as a complete sentence.
Only an independent clause can stand independently. A dependent clause is dependent on an independent clause.
Yes, it is. That is why it is called "a dependent clause." It is dependent upon the independent clause.
Yes, you can use a gerund after a semicolon in a sentence. The semicolon is used to join two closely related independent clauses, and a gerund can function as a noun in a sentence. Make sure the gerund phrase after the semicolon complements or expands upon the information in the first clause.
A complex sentence is a sentence that contains an independent clause and at least one dependent clause. The independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence, while the dependent clause relies on the independent clause to make sense.
It is a sentence with more than one independent clause and at least one dependent clause.In grammar, a compound complex sentence is made up of two independent clauses as well as at least one dependent clause. An independent clause can stand alone, while a dependent clause cannot, since it is not a complete sentence.
It can be an independent clause or a dependent clause. It is an independent clause if does not have a word at the beginning like "but" or "because". If there is a word like this at the beginning of the clause, it is a dependent clause.
The independent clause is lowered our prices. The dependent clause is sales increased.
This question is somewhat ambiguously phrased, because independent and dependent clauses are mutually exclusive categories, and a clause that is introduced by a subordinate conjunction is not independent by definition. However, substituting a coordinating conjunction in a independent clause by a subordinate conjunction can convert an initially independent clause into a dependent clause.
Independent: She rode the bus home. Dependent: Although she rode the bus home