From "about" to the end.
well for adjectives it must be a describing clause and for verb it must be a doing clause and for a adverb it must be a modifying clause
¿Cómo estàs ustedes? is how you say "how are you doing everyone?" in spanish.
A complex sentence has one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses.
Performing formal coordination
what is you talking about
Which system are you talking about.
A clause is a group of related words containing a subject that tells the reader what the sentence is about, and the verb tells the reader what the subject is doing. A clause comes in four types, independent, dependent, relative or noun clause
A clause is a group of words containing a subject and its verb; a noun clause takes the place of a noun and cannot stand on its own.The noun clause 'whatever is served' is the direct objectof the verb 'will eat'.
they are talking to you
The main parts of an independent clause are the subject (who or what the sentence is about) and the predicate (what the subject is doing or what is happening to the subject). An independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence because it expresses a complete thought.
denying basic rights to people
Michael, who was turning twenty next week, was planning his birthday party. As simply as I can put it: * the clause is generally characterised by and found between commas. * it is an extra bit of information, and can't be a stand alone sentence. * if you remove the clause, the remaining sentence still makes sense: Michael was planning his birthday party. Doing Latin really helps with this sort of stuff; for some reason my secondary school English teachers never really teach me this stuff.