A. Betty wants to harvest the corn.
B. When should Betty harvest the corn?
C. Betty would like to harvest the corn.
D. What Betty wants is to harvest the corn.
The answer is D. What Betty wants... the noun clause that acts as the subject of the sentence. Also, ...to harvest the corn. is also a noun clause that is the object of the verb is. See the link below.
Yes, it does. The subject pronoun is the subject of a sentence or a clause. Both a sentence or a clause must have a verb.Examples:He wants a new jacket. (the subject of the sentence is 'he', the verb is 'wants')The one he wants has his team's logo. (the subject of the clause is 'he', the verb is 'wants'; the subject of the sentence is 'one', the verb is 'has')I saw the jacket he wants at Mike's. (the relative clause 'he wants' relates to the direct object of the sentence 'jacket')
everybody wants that
transitive
No, the word 'she' is not a noun, 'she' is a personal pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for a female as the subject of a sentence or a clause. Examples:My mom made the cake, she is a good cook. (the pronoun 'she' takes the place of the noun 'mom' in the second part of the sentence)My cat had three kittens which she carefully protects.Mindy always gets what she wants.
A relative pronoun is a word used to introduce a relative clause, a type of subordinate (dependent) clause that 'relates' to the antecedent.A relative clause is a group of words that includes a subject and a verb but is not a complete sentence. The relative clause provides information about its antecedent.The relative pronouns are who, whom, whose, which, that.Examples:The boy who called you was looking for the math assignment.To whom should I address the note.The man whose car was damaged was angry.The ring which was my grandmother's was a graduation gift.The car that I drive is old.
What Betty wants is to harvest the corn.The noun clause is What Betty wants, the subject of the sentence.
d. What Betty wants is to harvest the corn. The noun clause is What Betty wants.
Yes, it does. The subject pronoun is the subject of a sentence or a clause. Both a sentence or a clause must have a verb.Examples:He wants a new jacket. (the subject of the sentence is 'he', the verb is 'wants')The one he wants has his team's logo. (the subject of the clause is 'he', the verb is 'wants'; the subject of the sentence is 'one', the verb is 'has')I saw the jacket he wants at Mike's. (the relative clause 'he wants' relates to the direct object of the sentence 'jacket')
The noun clause "what everyone wants" functions as the subject complement in the sentence. It describes or renames the subject "A symbolic flag" rather than indicating a direct action.
In this sentence, 'what' is a conjunctive pronoun. The sentence may be divided into two clauses (word groups with both a subject and verb). The first clause is "That's" or "that is", and the second is "what he wants to do." In the second clause, "what" functions as both a conjunction to join the two clauses anda relative pronoun.Let's think of the sentence this way: That(thing) is what (the thing that)he wants to do. By adding in the implied meaning of the pronouns 'that' and 'what' we can see their relationship.
No, they are not the same. A simple sentence has a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought: it can stand on its own and it makes sense. For example: I love ice cream. Jerry is a student. We visited New York. But a dependent clause cannot stand on its own-- it "depends" on an independent clause or it won't make any sense. For example: While I was working... (what happened?). If she wins the lottery... (what will she do?). As you can see, a dependent clause needs some additional information; in a sentence, it will be linked to an independent clause. So: While I was working, my brother sent me a text message. If she wins the lottery, she wants to go to Europe on vacation.
No, they are not the same. A simple sentence has a subject and a verb and expresses a complete thought: it can stand on its own and it makes sense. For example: I love ice cream. Jerry is a student. We visited New York. But a dependent clause cannot stand on its own-- it "depends" on an independent clause or it won't make any sense. For example: While I was working... (what happened?). If she wins the lottery... (what will she do?). As you can see, a dependent clause needs some additional information; in a sentence, it will be linked to an independent clause. So: While I was working, my brother sent me a text message. If she wins the lottery, she wants to go to Europe on vacation.
He wants to get his meat wet.
Of course. Santa Clause can do whatever he wants to.
As a question it means, "Who wants a pet?" As a dependent clause, it means, "...who wants a pet."
Yes, the sentence "he wants to pee" is grammatically correct.
rock but sometimes a secret character which is only unlockable if you have a wii and it has the the harvest moon wii