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A dependent clause.
An independent clause is a complete sentence that can stand on its own. A sentence must have a subject and a predicate in order to be considered an independent clause.
Your mom, your dad, and your dog.
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 sentence has a subject and a verb. It is a complete thought and can stand on it's own. A clause is not a complete thought. It is missing a subject or verb. It cannot stand on it's own.
A sentence with an adverb or adjective clause is a complex sentence, because an adjective clause is a subordinate clause. A complex sentence must contain one independent clause plus one or more subordinate clauses.
A sentence with an adverb or adjective clause is a complex sentence, because an adjective clause is a subordinate clause. A complex sentence must contain one independent clause plus one or more subordinate clauses.
main verb in the independent clause. Adverbial clauses always start with a subordinating conjunction and must connect to an independent clause to make sense. For example: Even if I take the train, I still might be late to my appointment
No, a complex sentence must have at least one dependent clause in addition to an independent clause. "Jenny was the largest elephant in the circus" contains only an independent clause, so it is a simple sentence. An example of a complex sentence would be, "Before Alfred arrived, Jenny was the largest elephant in the circus."
"Because" can be used at the start of a sentence to give a reason or explanation for something that was just mentioned in the previous sentence. It helps to connect ideas and show the cause-and-effect relationship between them.
The short answer: you don't need one.The long answer:Which is a subordinating conjunction, meaning that when it starts a clause, it makes a dependent clause which is an incomplete sentence.Grammar dictates the following comma placement in the pairing of clauses:(Independent Clause = IC, Dependent Clause = DC) IC DC or DC, ICSince which will start a dependent clause, provided that you put the independent clause first, you need not place a comma on behalf of the word which. If, however, the dependent clause goes first, you must place a comma after the entire clause, not just the word which.
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