"After you had eaten" is a clause, not a sentence. "After you had eaten, you cleared up" is a sentence, and "you cleared up" is the main clause.
· It is a subordinate clause because it cannot stand on its own.
· It is an adverbial clause because it answers the question "when?" and qualifies the action of the verb in the main clause.
· It is a temporal clause because it answers the question "when?" and gives a time.
Hope one of these is the kind of answer you are looking for.
The sentence type that includes both a subordinate clause and an independent clause would be a complex sentence. You would need to insert a conjunction to separate the two clauses for the sentence to be grammatically correct.
what is the clauses, sentence type, and sentence purpoes
complex sentence
Not a simple sentence, but a compound, complex or compound-complex may have its principal or independent clause in inverted order within the sentence.
Simple
Simple
It is a free relative clause, also referred to as a headless relative clause.
It is a subordinate clause.
An anacoluthon is a sentence or clause which is grammatically inconsistent, especially with respect to the type of clausal or phrasal complement for the initial clause.
adverbial clause
Complex (APEX)
adjective