"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.
I think you can't have a subordinate independent clause. A subordinate clause is a clause which is dependant on another clause it can't stand alone as a sentence. An independent clause can stand alone as a sentence.
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.
The sentence "That was the reason why he came late" is a complex sentence, as it contains an independent clause ("That was the reason") and a dependent clause ("why he came late").
Simple
Simple
A sentence with one main clause and one or more dependent clauses is a complex sentence. This type of sentence has one independent clause that can stand alone as a complete sentence, along with one or more dependent clauses that rely on the main clause for meaning.
The clause "these sentences are not very difficult" in the given sentence is an independent clause because it can stand alone as a complete sentence and expresses a complete thought.
It is a free relative clause, also referred to as a headless relative clause.
It is a subordinate clause.