i think it like written or words
Which part of the sentence is a nonrestrictive clause?
A nonrestrictive clause is a clause that is not essential to the overall meaning of a sentence and cannot be punctuated as its own sentence; they are also known as nonessential clauses and dependant clauses. In the sentence "After he returned home from school, James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus," the introductory adverbial clause "After he returned home from school" modifies and is not essential to the meaning of the main clause "James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus" because it tells when the realization occurred; therefore, the clause is nonrestrictive.
A nonrestrictive clause is a clause that is not essential to the overall meaning of a sentence and cannot be punctuated as its own sentence; they are also known as nonessential clauses and dependant clauses. In the sentence "After he returned home from school, James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus," the introductory adverbial clause "After he returned home from school" modifies and is not essential to the meaning of the main clause "James realized that he had left a notebook on his bus" because it tells when the realization occurred; therefore, the clause is nonrestrictive.
Yes,this would be nonrestrictiuve because most pple believe commas come after a long period of sentancess///
Yes, a comma is needed, because "which" is used in what is called a nonrestrictive clause, and nonrestrictive clauses require commas around them. Restrictive clauses use "that" instead of "which" and do not require commas. I've provided examples below. Nonrestrictive clause: I tossed the shirt, which had a coffee stain on it, into the hamper. In this sentence, "which had a coffee stain on it" adds information about the shirt, but it is not used to identify a particular shirt. Restrictive clause: I tossed the shirt that had a coffee stain on it into the hamper. In this sentence, "that had a coffee stain on it" is used to say that it was specifically that shirt that I tossed into the hamper. It indicates that one of the shirts had a coffee stain, and that was the shirt I tossed into the hamper. While this answers more than the specific question asked, it is important to know that "which" is used in nonrestrictive clauses, and that is why the comma is needed.
No it's not.
"if" clause and a "then" clause. The "if" clause states a condition that must be true in order for the statement to be true, and the "then" clause states the result or outcome if the condition is met.
When which is used to introduce a nonrestrictive adjectivial clause it must it must follow a comma. But there are numerous examples where which does not need to follow a comma. Including: Which melon do you want? I can't tell which melon to buy.
The difference between that and what depends on how they are used. One example: "That boy over there is very tall". "That" is in reference to a specific boy, the tall one. "That" is usually used to specify a particular person place or thing (noun). "What boy?" When using "What" you are not specifying a particular boy, but asking which boy are we specifying. "What" is usually used to ask a question. You may be asking the question due to hearing "what" used improperly in a sentence like "He is not the boy what I saw." In this case "what" was used in place of the proper choice of "that".
"Which diddn't leave to much time for discussion" is this a nonrestrictive clauserestrictive clauseparticipial phrase or gerund
comma
Use "that" in a restrictive clause, to specify a particular thing you are talking about, and use "which" in a nonrestrictive clause, to provide additional information about something. The "which" clause is not essential to the sentence and can be removed from the sentence without changing the meaning.Examples:Restrictive clause: The car that was in the driveway was damaged by the falling tree. Here, "that" specifies the particular car that was in the driveway, singling it out from any other cars. It could be that the car that was in the driveway was damaged, but the cars parked in the street were fine.Nonrestrictive clause: The car, which was in the driveway, was damaged by the falling tree. Here, "which" is used to add the nonessential information that the car happened to be in the driveway. If the "which" clause is removed, you get "The car was damaged by the falling tree," and that is the essential meaning of the sentence.