verb
No, it is not correct, it is not a sentence.The words "that who can escape" is a subject with a relative clause. There is no verb.The demonstrative pronoun 'that' (subject) is incorrect.The pronoun 'that' is a singular form, the relative clause indicates that the subject is more than one person or thing (animal).The subject should be 'those'.A correct form is "Those who can escape..." followed by a verb (predicate).Examples of a complete sentence are:Those who can escape will. (the verb is 'will', meaning 'will do so')Those who can escape must find refuge. (the verb is 'must find' followed by the direct object 'refuge')
No, "she wore a hat with a blue trimming" is not a clause; it is a complete sentence. A clause typically contains a subject and a predicate, expressing a complete thought. In this case, the sentence contains a subject ("she") and a verb phrase ("wore a hat with a blue trimming"), making it a complete thought rather than just a clause.
The predicate is the subject of the subjunctive. If there is no clause the the predicate cannot be closed. If the difference of the products if greater than 14, then the subject is the predicate. Hitherto, if the sum of the difference is less than 1, then the product is productive. If not, then the subject is a photo.
what kind of clause is than jogging
The relative clause 'what everyone wants' is the direct object of the verb 'is' and a predicate nominative, restating the subject of the sentence 'a symbolic flag'.
The leaves turning red and yellow are beautiful. -- This sentence is correct.The subject of the sentence = the leaves. This is a plural subject - more than one. The subject and verb must agree, this means if you have a plural subject you must have a plural verb form. The plural verb in this sentence is 'are'.The leaves' turning red and yellow is beautiful. -- This sentence is not correct'Is' is not a plural verb it is a singular verb.The main clause in this sentence is -- 'The leaves are beautiful''turning red and brown' -- is a subordinate clause
A clause can be a sentence if it has a subject and a verb but not all clauses do.A clause is a unit structured around a verb phrase.If you need an example of a clause (this is a conditional clause), see the link below.'However, there is a slight clause to the contract.'
It is a sum that other club has to offer if they want to get in talks with a player (offer him a contract). This doesn't mean that the player will accept their offer. And if other team offers bigger money than the release clause, the team selling the player will more likely accept higher offer than that matching the release clause.
Yes.
Yes.
what kind of clause is than jogging
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.