That is an independent clause. It would be a subordinate clause if you said, "I would like to know who...."
The photographs on this page and the next show different landmarks from around the world. This is an independent clause, as it can stand alone as a complete sentence.
This is a dependent adverbial clause (subordinate clause).
The clause "after the actor tripped" is a subordinate adverbial clause, specifically a subordinate time clause. It provides information on when the action in the main clause (preceding or following it) took place.
This is a subordinate adverbial clause, as it provides information about the time ("since you left our house early"). It cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
It is an adverbial clause of reason, as it explains why the women covered their hair.
Use a comma before "which" when it introduces a non-restrictive clause (adds extra information but is not essential to the sentence's meaning), and do not use a comma when "which" introduces a restrictive clause (essential to the sentence's meaning).
This is a dependent adverbial clause (subordinate clause).
The clause "after the actor tripped" is a subordinate adverbial clause, specifically a subordinate time clause. It provides information on when the action in the main clause (preceding or following it) took place.
This is a subordinate adverbial clause, as it provides information about the time ("since you left our house early"). It cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.
Adverb clause
adverbial clause
adverbial clause
It is an adverbial clause of reason, as it explains why the women covered their hair.
Noun.
adjective
The clause "that I found in my book" is a relative clause, specifically an adjective clause. It provides additional information about the noun "book" by describing which book the speaker found.
The clause is an adverb.
This is a type of introductory clause that is called a dependent clause. It is basically one that help to provide some background information.