The clause 'that the coach recommended' may be an adjective clause, as it begins with a relative pronoun (that) and modifies a noun such as plan, or strategy, or program.
(* It might also be part of a noun clause if used as the subject of a sentence, such as That the coach recommended a new plan seemed strange.)
adjective
"that the coach recommended."
"that the coach recommended."
No. It's a noun (He is a leading tennis coach.) or verb (He will coach at the new tennis club.)
It is an adjective phrase, because it will apply to a noun (e.g. plan, program).
He was recommended to the club by quarterback coach Dick Rehbein.
It's an adverb.
Time can be used as a noun and a verb. Noun: Do you have the time? Verb: The coach timed our laps. Good is an adjective. We have a good coach.
It is an adverb because it tells when the verb occured.
Usually, their contract includes a buyout clause. They pay them whatever the buyout amount is.
Yes, the word 'swimming' is a gerund, a verbal noun, the presentparticipleof the verb to swim. A gerund functions in a sentence as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition. Examples:subject: Swimming is my favorite sport.object: We have a new coach for swimming.The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective: swimming lessons, swimming competition, etc.
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