No, "before we went out" is a subordinating clause because it does not express a complete thought on its own. It depends on the rest of the sentence to make sense.
A subordinating adverb phrase or clause that comes before the main clause should be followed by a comma. This helps to indicate the relationship between the subordinate and main clauses. For example: "Before the concert, she practiced her guitar."
The sentence "I went to the store" is an example of a main clause ("I went to the store") that can stand alone. Adding a dependent clause, such as "after work," would give additional context and complete the meaning of the sentence: "I went to the store after work."
No, "before we went out" is a dependent clause, not a complete phrase on its own. It lacks a subject and does not form a complete sentence by itself.
Yes, "before lunch" is a subordinate clause because it does not express a complete thought on its own and is dependent on the main clause "they spoke."
An alternative term for a main clause is an independent clause.
this is hard
This is so hard
adverbial clause
If you have the subordinate clause before the main clause, you write a comma. However, the rules are a bit different for relative pronouns connecting main and subordinate clause.
If you have the subordinate clause before the main clause, you write a comma. However, the rules are a bit different for relative pronouns connecting main and subordinate clause.
The clause "before Jane leaves" is a dependent clause, which means it relies on an independent clause, or main clause, to complete the sentence's meaning.Answer:'Before Jane leaves home,..' on its own is a dependent clause, or what is also known as a hanging clause waiting for the main clause to make it complete.'Before Jane leaves home' is also an introductory adverbial clause as it has a subject 'I' and a verb 'leaves' which make it a clause, then it has the prepositional word 'before' telling when Janes leaves home. This; therefore, introduces the adverbial clause.Before Jane leaves home, she clears the table.'She clears the table.' ( main clause that can stand on its own as a dependant sentence)'Before she leaves home,...' is dependent on 'she clears the table.' to make it complete.
A clause modifier is simply a clause that modifies something. A clause is a sentence with at least a subject and a verb, for instance "I went to school". Now if we want to turn this clause into a modifier, we simply let it modify the meaning of something, for instance the phrase "I had breakfast": I had breakfast before I went to school.
Yes, it can be. It can also be a preposition (used with just a noun object), or an adverb (used alone). conjunction - He went home before he went to the meeting. preposition - He went home before the meeting. adverb - He had met the owner before.
if the main or most important part is before the main parts you use a comma, but if it is after then no comma
Before the piggy went to the market, it ate breakfast.
AAAWWUUBBIS is an acronym to remember the most common subordinating conjunctions: Although, After, As, While, When, Until, Because, Before, If, and Since. If a clause begins with an AAAWWUUBBIS word (subordinating conjunction), it becomes a dependent clause.For example:I went to the store.(Independent clause. This is a complete sentence.)When I went to the store...(Dependent clause. This is not complete without a comma and an independent clause.)When I went to the store, I saw my friend.(Dependent clause + comma + independent clause. This is again a complete sentence.)
A complex sentence has an independent clause which is joined to a dependent clause. An example of this is "Mary went to the store before she made dinner."