The clause "that I found in my book" is a relative clause, specifically an adjective clause. It provides additional information about the noun "book" by describing which book the speaker found.
The clause in parentheses, "that I found in my book," is a restrictive relative clause. It provides essential information about "the one," specifying which paper is being referred to. Without this clause, the meaning of the sentence would be less clear.
The clause in parentheses, "that I found in my book," is a relative clause. It provides additional information about "the one" in the main clause and is introduced by the relative pronoun "that." Relative clauses often function to specify or clarify the noun they modify.
Adverb clause
This is a dependent adverbial clause (subordinate clause).
Noun.
adjective
adverbial clause
adverbial clause
It is an adverbial clause of reason, as it explains why the women covered their hair.
This is a type of introductory clause that is called a dependent clause. It is basically one that help to provide some background information.
The phrase "that I found in my book" is a noun clause. It functions as a noun within a sentence, often acting as the object of a verb or the subject of a statement. In this case, it provides additional information about a specific idea or item related to "that."
The clause shown in parentheses before "they had dinner" is a subordinate clause, specifically an adverbial clause. It provides additional information about the timing or condition related to the main clause. This type of clause typically cannot stand alone as a complete sentence.