adjective
The clause "where he catches the most fish" functions as an adverb, as it provides information on the location of the action "catches." It modifies the verb "catches" by explaining where the action takes place.
Adverbial clause, 'where' shows it is an adverbial clause of place
a noun
noun
The phrase "whoever catches the fish" is a noun clause. It functions as a subject or object within a sentence, often serving to represent a person or group of people in a general sense. In this case, it refers to any person who catches a fish.
Adverbial clause, 'where' shows it is an adverbial clause of place
"Dad has a secret fishing spot" is the independent clause.
adj.
Dad has a secret fishing spot
Dad has a secret fishing spot
No. Fish can be a verb, or a noun, or a plural noun, which can be an adjunct or adjective (fish fillets). The word "fishy" is an adjective but the adverb (fishily) is not a regularly used word.
think its stupid how you have the qustion on here but no the dam answer