The subordinate clause in your sentence begins with the word before.
Of course it's a word. It's in the English language and is another word for A which goes before a word starting with a vowel rather than a consonant. ;)
It's a prefix. Pre- means before. It goes before the main part of the word. Example: Exodus
No. A prefix is a series of letters that goes before a word. Ex: DISlike UNimportant UNusual
colored chalk sidewalk chalk dustless chalk
It goes before. Like "I was going to, but I decided not to."
chick
The word that can go before or after foot is "big."
The word that goes before "able" is usually an adverb or an adjective. For example, "capable," "comfortable," or "reliable."
play under and it goes before 'cover'
The word that goes after military and before parlor is "military." The correct sequence is military, military, parlor.
strangle
In the sentence, "Dolly must clean up her room before she goes out," the word that begins the subordinate clause is before. The subordinate clause is "before she goes out."
blacklist
The root word that goes before sale is wholesale, before meal is mealtime, and before hearted is wholehearted.
Top Hard Cowboy Party
Brave