Michael, who was turning twenty next week, was planning his birthday party. As simply as I can put it: * the clause is generally characterised by and found between commas. * it is an extra bit of information, and can't be a stand alone sentence. * if you remove the clause, the remaining sentence still makes sense: Michael was planning his birthday party. Doing Latin really helps with this sort of stuff; for some reason my secondary school English teachers never really teach me this stuff.
Demonstrative pronouns (this that these and those) direct attention where Relative pronouns (that which whom whose) are part of a subordinate cluase
The opposite of subordinate (secondary) could be primary, main, predominant, or major.The opposite of subordinate (in authority) could be superior, senior, or ranking.The opposite of the noun subordinate (underling) could be boss, chief, superior, supervisor, or director.
Subordinate
"After you finish your dinner" is the subordinate clause.
Subordinate clause: "who had barely survived in a war camp".
Demonstrative pronouns (this that these and those) direct attention where Relative pronouns (that which whom whose) are part of a subordinate cluase
whats a cluase
its santaclause012@embargmail.com
Kingsley Holgate
An independent clause can stand by itself.
there is no subordinate conjunction (because, after, therefore, even though, etc) so it is not a subordinate clause. if you look at it and it could be a complete sentence on it's own and make sense, it's not a subordinate clause.
well there is rice and that comes from Asia and then theres some holiday tradtions like santa cluase
the large city is santa cluase
Do you mean Santa Clause? If so, it is Papai Noel
NO, HE ReallY Doesn'T BelivE TO SantA
That is an independent clause. It would be a subordinate clause if you said, "I would like to know who...."
There isn't a difference between a subordinate clause and a subordinate clause.