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.
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
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.
A dependent clause is a clause (subject and predicate) that cannot form a sentence by itself. An example would be: "When I went to the store" --this clause has a subject and verb, but the word "when" makes it dependent on more information. Another example would be "Although she felt sad"--it needs another clause to make it a complete sentence.
The clause / sentence has no meaning out of context. If it is a response, the somewhat archaic but correct construction is "I am fine, as I hope you are as well." You would not use the words "too" and "as well" in the same clause as that is redundant.
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.
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
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
Well he sang about a White Christmas and he sang about a Blue Christmas.
Well i sing about life and sing songs popular artists wrote.
Well there would be really nothing to eat to help you to sing.
Words That Sing Well was created in 2011-01.
i think sing maybe because i sing but oh well
well u no if u sing good if you can swallow honey whole.
Well, I am looking for a software were you type the lyrics and it turns into music and people sing it. Do you mean the same thing?