The part of a larger sentence that can stand on its own, without anything else, as a complete, gramatically correct sentence. For example, in the sentence 'This novel can be read through a Marxist lens, but it can also have a gendered reading applied to it', The part before the first comma is the independent clause because it can stand alone. The part after that does not make sense on its own, so it is a dependent clause.
An independent clause stands alone.
An alternative term for a main clause is an independent clause.
Only an independent clause can stand independently. A dependent clause is dependent on an independent clause.
An independent clause is a sentence that can stand on its own.
A complex sentence is a sentence that contains an independent clause and at least one dependent clause. The independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence, while the dependent clause relies on the independent clause to make sense.
A clause can not stand alone in a sentence, whereas an independent clause can stand alone in a sentence.
This question is somewhat ambiguously phrased, because independent and dependent clauses are mutually exclusive categories, and a clause that is introduced by a subordinate conjunction is not independent by definition. However, substituting a coordinating conjunction in a independent clause by a subordinate conjunction can convert an initially independent clause into a dependent clause.
It can be an independent clause or a dependent clause. It is an independent clause if does not have a word at the beginning like "but" or "because". If there is a word like this at the beginning of the clause, it is a dependent clause.
I think you can't have a subordinate independent clause. A subordinate clause is a clause which is dependant on another clause it can't stand alone as a sentence. An independent clause can stand alone as a sentence.
Yes, it is. That is why it is called "a dependent clause." It is dependent upon the independent clause.
An independent clause can also be called a simple sentence.
Independent clause: "I went to the store." Dependent clause: "Because it was raining."