The pronoun 'that' is functioning as a demonstrative pronoun as the subject of the sentence 'that was your conclusion'. The pronoun 'that' is taking the place of the noun 'conclusion'.
It's a bit easier to see if you place the parts of the sentence in a different order:
That was your conclusion about the strange lights in the sky, a new airplane? (that = conclusion)
"Another animal with a strange name" is the subject. "is the Platypus" is the predicate. "Another" & "with a strange name" all modify the noun "animal". "is" is the verb. "Platypus" is a proper noun, but in this sentence it is used as an indirect object in the predicate, and refers to the "animal with a strange name" in the subject. "animal with a strange name" is the object of the sentence. The sentence would be diagramed thusly... subject | predicate Another animal with a strange name | is the Platypus. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
He was known for his strange antics.
His arrant was very strange
The strange man was so weird he went into the sacrosanct temple.
Strange is the positive degree. The comparative is stranger (more strange). The superlative is strangest (most strange).
This is a strange answer to this question.
nick is so strange
it vibrates
No. A clause is more than one word. Were is the past form of are. In this sentence -- The boy who we met yesterday is very strange. The clause - who we met yesterday - is a relative clause. It begins with the relative pronoun - who.
The air has a strange greenish hue this evening.
I had a strange feeling that someone was stalking me last night.
How strange that so many example sentences submitted are not sentences at all. The strange thing is, not the sentences, but the people who decide to submit an example sentence without any punctuation or proper capitalization. That is very strange to me.
In Delaware there is a trailer on route 13 near dover that is half abandon airplane half trailer it is called the airplane trailer.
"Another animal with a strange name" is the subject. "is the Platypus" is the predicate. "Another" & "with a strange name" all modify the noun "animal". "is" is the verb. "Platypus" is a proper noun, but in this sentence it is used as an indirect object in the predicate, and refers to the "animal with a strange name" in the subject. "animal with a strange name" is the object of the sentence. The sentence would be diagramed thusly... subject | predicate Another animal with a strange name | is the Platypus. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
He was known for his strange antics.
sentence of strange
My friend's kin is strange.