noun
adverb
adverb
adverb
noun :D A+ 4th
The subordinate clause is 'before she goes out.'
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."
No, they sting whoever they can.
The lease agreement should stipulate a clause about keeping the carpets clean and if not tenant can be charged a fee for it to be cleaned. This opens a clause for the contract to read what constitutes dirty or clean and a need to clean. If this is done without your permission within the contract you can reverse charges as entry to apartment without permission unless in clause etc on down the line.
The word whoever is used when you don't know a specific person to name, and it does not matter to know who. Whoever made the mess in the kitchen better clean it up! I think whoever wrote this story must have experienced hunger too. I gave a "Happy Card" to whoever I passed on the sidewalk.
The sentence is a complex sentence because it contains one independent clause "my mother told us to clean the kitchen" and one dependent clause "but we forgot."
The subordinate clause in your sentence begins with the word before.
Since it answers the question 'When?', the clause functions as an adverb.