no
A relative clause is also called an adjective clause because it describes the antecedent noun or pronoun.A relative pronoun is used to introduce an adjective clause:The cookies that mom made are for the bake sale. (mom is the subject of the adjective clause)A relative pronoun is used as the subject of the adjective clause: My car which is new was hit in the parking lot. (which is the subject of the adjective clause)
adverb clause
The relative pronoun in the underlined adjective clause "The book that she was reading" is "that," which is used as the object of the preposition "of."
adjective
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?
An adjective clause is the group of words that contain the subject and the verb acting as an adjective. An adverb clause answers questions like how, when and where.
"You" is not an adjective clause, or any other kind of clause, because it is a single word. "You" is a pronoun.
a dependent clause that modifies a noun
The adjective clause is in bold: "He is the one for whom the message was intended.", used to describe the predicate nominative 'one'.
An adjective clause begins with a relative pronoun, such as who, whom, whose, which, that, when, or where.
adjective
It is used as an adjective, applying to the subject of the sentence or clause.