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The clause "until my room was cleaned" is an adverb clause, which begins with an adverb (until) acting as a conjunction.
The clause "who can cook" is an adjective clause, modifying man.The larger clause (that you will marry a man who can cook) is the object of the sentence, and is a noun clause.---The clause "who can cook" is an adjective clause (aka relative clause), a group of words with a subject (who) and a verb (can cook) that is introduced by a relative pronoun, but does not express a complete thought. Example:A man who can cook is a man after my own heart.The clause "who can cook" is describing the noun "man".An adverb clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb that is introduced by a subordinate conjunction, that does not express a complete thought.He scrubbed the kitchen until everything shined.The clause "until everything shined" is modifying the verb "scrubbed".Note: Just like an adjective, an adjective clause describes a noun, and an adverb clause functions as an adverb.
The independent clause is "Mom wouldn't let me go to the party" This is a separate clause that could be it's own sentence.The dependent clause is "until my room was cleaned" (adverb clause).
Adverb clause
No. The word until is a preposition or conjunction, and more rarely may be considered an adverb.
The clause "until my room was cleaned" is an adverb clause, which begins with an adverb (until) acting as a conjunction.
Since it answers the question 'When?', the clause functions as an adverb.
The independent clause is "Mom wouldn't let me go to the party" This is a separate clause that could be it's own sentence.The dependent clause is "until my room was cleaned" (adverb clause).
It is an adverb phrase, modifying a verb. There is no noun that could be modified by "until."
The independent clause is "Mom wouldn't let me go to the party" This is a separate clause that could be it's own sentence.The dependent clause is "until my room was cleaned" (adverb clause).
The word until can BEGIN an adverb clause, but it is not an adverb by itself. The word until is a preposition or conjunction.
The clause "who can cook" is an adjective clause, modifying man.The larger clause (that you will marry a man who can cook) is the object of the sentence, and is a noun clause.---The clause "who can cook" is an adjective clause (aka relative clause), a group of words with a subject (who) and a verb (can cook) that is introduced by a relative pronoun, but does not express a complete thought. Example:A man who can cook is a man after my own heart.The clause "who can cook" is describing the noun "man".An adverb clause is a group of words with a subject and a verb that is introduced by a subordinate conjunction, that does not express a complete thought.He scrubbed the kitchen until everything shined.The clause "until everything shined" is modifying the verb "scrubbed".Note: Just like an adjective, an adjective clause describes a noun, and an adverb clause functions as an adverb.
An adverb clause is a group of words that functions as an adverb in a sentence. It typically includes a subject and a verb and provides information about when, where, why, or how an action is taking place. Adverb clauses can appear at the beginning, middle, or end of a sentence.
The independent clause is "Mom wouldn't let me go to the party" This is a separate clause that could be it's own sentence.The dependent clause is "until my room was cleaned" (adverb clause).
Adverb clause
The adverb clause is everything after the word Land. The word "until" is a subordinating conjunction that connects the dependent clause, which acts as an adverb. The two phrases (to the Northwest Territories, in 1868) are adverbial phrases.
No. The word until is a preposition or conjunction, and more rarely may be considered an adverb.