The kinds of clauses are:
independent clause
dependent clause
adverbrial clause
adjective clause
noun clause
appositive clause
gerundial clause
prepared by: Mr.Lance Borrommeo
The two main types of clauses are independent clauses, which can stand alone as complete sentences, and dependent clauses, which rely on an independent clause to form a complete sentence. Dependent clauses often begin with subordinating conjunctions like "because," "if," "although," or "while."
The main coordinating conjunctions are: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so. They are used to connect words, phrases, or clauses of equal importance in a sentence.
A subordinating conjunction is used to connect independent and dependent clauses together. These conjunctions show the relationship between the clauses, such as cause and effect or time sequence. Examples include "because," "although," and "when."
The three kinds of conjunctions are coordinating conjunctions, subordinating conjunctions, and correlative conjunctions. Coordinating conjunctions connect words, phrases, or clauses of equal importance. Subordinating conjunctions introduce dependent clauses and show the relationship between the dependent clause and the rest of the sentence. Correlative conjunctions are paired conjunctions that work together to connect elements in a sentence.
Adverbial subordinate clauses, adjectival subordinate clauses, and nominal subordinate clauses.
dependent clauses
There are two kinds of clauses and three types of clauses in the English language. The two kinds are independent and dependent. An independent clause consists of a subject and a predicate that represent a complete thought. Dependent clauses depend on independent clauses to make complete sense. the three dependent clauses are noun clauses, adjective clauses, and adverb clauses.
participial phrasesinfinitive phraseselliptical clauses
There are three main types of noun clauses: that-clauses, wh-clauses, and if/whether-clauses. That-clauses begin with "that" (e.g., "I believe that he is right"), wh-clauses start with words like "who," "what," "when," "where," "why," or "how" (e.g., "I wonder who won the game"), and if/whether-clauses introduce choices or possibilities (e.g., "She asked whether we could go home early").
Relative clauses should be matched with "who" clauses, which serve as the subject of the sentence and provide additional information about a person. For example, "The man who won the race is my friend." In this sentence, "who won the race" is a relative clause that provides more detail about "the man."
A subordinating conjunction is used to connect independent and dependent clauses together. These conjunctions show the relationship between the clauses, such as cause and effect or time sequence. Examples include "because," "although," and "when."
The three different kinds of sentences are simple, compound, and complex. Simple sentences require one independent clause but no dependent clauses. Compound sentences are made up of 2 independent clauses and a dependent clause is possible. A complex sentence requires one independent clause and one dependent clause
Exemption clauses are the problem, it is not the nature
Noun clauses do not modify they are subordinate clauses which can fill the position of subject object complement etc in a clause.There are four main kinds of noun clauses in Englishthat clause - Everyone believes that the earth is round.Wh - clause - What she believes is no business of yours.infinitive clause - His plan is to catch the early flight.-ing clause - They are in danger of making a mistake
a complete subject and a complete predicate
1. No punctuation between 2 clauses. 2. Comma splice 3. No comma before a coordinating conjunction
A sentence is made up of one clause or more clauses. The kinds of sentence based on their structures other than complex sentence are namely: complex-compound sentence, compound sentence, simple sentence.
A simple sentence.