The cat thought it was ironic that the baby, who much was younger, could steal his food without getting yelled by the adults. They had just yelled at him yesterday for sniff at the baby's bottle.
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance".This relative clause functions as an appositive (a word or phrase renaming something earlier in the sentence). This relative clause 'relates' to the noun 'worry', the subject of the sentence.
'He was a worried boy.' In this sentence worried is describing the boy, therefore worried is an adjective.
An adjective is a word that describes a noun or a verb. An example of a sentence that uses the word "abstract" in a sentence as an adjective would be: It is difficult for children to fully comprehend many abstract ideas.
He painted the window still.
Comics are often used for satiric purposes.
"That". In a non-restrictive adjective clause, such as in the sentence: "He went to the Eiffel Tower, which is located in Paris." The non-restrictive adjective clause, "which is located in Paris", called non-restrictive because it does not serve to improve the identification of the Eiffel Tower or "restrict" the meaning of it, contains the adjective clause pronoun "which". The reader would know what the Eiffel Tower was referring to even without the adjective clause because there is only one Eiffel Tower. This is what makes the adjective clause non-restrictive - not improving the identification of the noun. One could not use "that" in place of "which" because "that" is only used to alter or restrict the meaning of the noun. Here is an example of a restrictive adjective clause using "that": "I went to the store that is on the corner of Sunset and Vine." In this sentence the adjective clause, "that is on the corner of Sunset and Vine", restricts which store we are referring to, to the one "that is on the corner of Sunset and Vine" and not the one on Main and Third Streets. Thus it is called a restrictive clause. In restrictive clauses, one can use "that" and any of the other adjective clause pronouns: who, whom, which, where, when.
Thee was an ironic twist to the story
There was an ironic twist in the story. Hope that helped?
you just did =D
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance".This relative clause functions as an appositive (a word or phrase renaming something earlier in the sentence). This relative clause 'relates' to the noun 'worry', the subject of the sentence.
by adjective in the sentence
Use commas to separate clauses.
In a sentence.
Both types of clauses use the same type of punctuation, which depends on where they are in the sentence, how long they are, and whether there is some reason to set them off with particular punctuation (dashes, parentheses, semicolons, commas).
NO but in the sentence "Use of the word "in" as an adjective is IN these days" the IN is an adjective
An adjective describes a noun.
The noun clause in the given sentence is "that he would use up his inheritance", a relative clause which relates to the subject noun "worry".