adverb
Although you sing well, we have no soprano positions left.Your clause is in bold. It's an adverbial clause, also known as an adverb clause.Adverbial clauses begin with the words: when, while, where, as, since, if, although, whereas, unless, and because.
"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.
Since when is "although" a clause?? I would consider "although" a word :o)Having said that, I believe your question is what type of clause "although" introduces: clauses of concession.Clauses of concession can also be introdcued by while, when, if, even if, even though.
The subordinate clause of the sentence is -- Although the ostrich is a bird
adverb
Although you sing well, we have no soprano positions left.Your clause is in bold. It's an adverbial clause, also known as an adverb clause.Adverbial clauses begin with the words: when, while, where, as, since, if, although, whereas, unless, and because.
Although you sing well, we have no soprano positions left.Your clause is in bold. It's an adverbial clause, also known as an adverb clause.Adverbial clauses begin with the words: when, while, where, as, since, if, although, whereas, unless, and because.
"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.
Since when is "although" a clause?? I would consider "although" a word :o)Having said that, I believe your question is what type of clause "although" introduces: clauses of concession.Clauses of concession can also be introdcued by while, when, if, even if, even though.
The subordinate clause of the sentence is -- Although the ostrich is a bird
Yes, "although" is a subordinating conjunction. It is used to introduce a subordinate clause and show the relationship between the main clause and the subordinate clause.
Yes, the adverb clause "although the ostrich is a bird" would be followed by a comma.
The correct pronoun is I, the subjective pronoun.Can you sing as well as I?Can you sing as well as I can?Can you sing as well as I can sing?All of the above are correct. Even when the verb 'can' or 'can sing' is not used at the end, the subjective pronoun is used because the verb (verbs) is implied.
she does sing well
"Although" is an adverb, to be used at the beginning of an adverbial clause: Although it is very cold, he did not want a coat.
Independent: She rode the bus home. Dependent: Although she rode the bus home