Want this question answered?
The Establishment Clause and the The Free Excercise Clause
forcing ones beliefs on another (grad point) ;)
'Where they would be protected from the wind' is an adverbial clause, a group of words that contains a subject (they) and a verb (be protected) but is not a complete thought, not a complete sentence.An adverbial clause is a dependent clause that functions as an adverb; the entire clause modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
Yes, 'where they would be protected from the wind' is a noun clause, a group of words that has a subject (they) and a verb (be protected) but is not a complete thought, and functions in a sentence as a noun.Example: This is where they would be protected from the wind. (direct object of the verb)It is also a relative clause with the word 'where' functioning as a relative pronoun, relating back to an antecedent.Example: This is a place where they would be protected from the wind. (the relative clause 'relates' to the antecedent 'place')
free excercise clause
states {{novanet}}
refraining from certain vaccinations
Usually a single clause is too short to qualify for copyright protection. If used in commerce, for example as a business slogan, it may be protected as a trademark.
The clause "after the actor tripped" is a subordinate adverbial clause, specifically a subordinate time clause. It provides information on when the action in the main clause (preceding or following it) took place.
"You played tennis anyway" is the independent clause; "although it was raining" is the dependent clause. An independent clause can stand on its own as a sentence, but a dependent clause cannot be a sentence.
It's a clause for the Conservative Jewish GET. It forces the husband to grant his wife a Jewish divorce, protected the wife from becoming an agunah (chained wife).
shield law