adverb
- Brittany buttonz :D
Noun
adverbial clause
adverbial clause
"After you finish your dinner" is the subordinate clause.
It is an adverb clause. It will say "when" an activity may take place.
The clause, "After you finish your dinner," is an adverbial clause which modifies the verb, "may go." A comma should appear after the word, "dinner." The remainder of the sentence expresses a factual possibility.
The whole sentence is an independent clause. Unless...... if you were trying to say: You burned your dinner and you went out to eat.This would me 2 independent clause. These would be (you burned your dinner) and (you went out to eat)
No. In the construction "the man who came to dinner" the word who functions as a pronoun in the restrictive clause. Note that there is a verb in the clause, which does not appear in prepositional phrases.
I think you are asking for the word used when we have a drink before dinner. If so, the word is aperitif. Any help?
A complex sentence has an independent clause which is joined to a dependent clause. An example of this is "Mary went to the store before she made dinner."
It's an adverb because it is answering the question when.
'We will meet at the shakin' Dinnre