A clause is a specific part of a legal document. An example sentence would be: She was advised to read that clause very closely.
i watched the bourne supremacy.
The word is spelled although. An example sentence using this word is, "Although the cat was scared, it did not become aggressive."
The adverb clause typically modifies the verb in the sentence.
An example of a dependent clause using "who" is: "who lives next door." This clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it relies on the rest of the sentence for context and meaning.
An insubordinate clause is just another word for an Independent clause. A subordinate clause is just another word for a Dependent clause. An Independent clause is a sentence that can stand by itself and a dependent clause can't stand by itself.
The subordinate clause in your sentence begins with the word before.
Using the word "then" at the beginning of a sentence is not incorrect. However, it does not make a sentence complete. A complete sentence must have, at a minimum, a subject and a verb. "Then" is neither of those.
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."
Actually, there is no Santa Clause.
The word "that" is used in a sentence to introduce a clause that provides additional information or clarification. It can be used to connect ideas, indicate relationships between concepts, or to introduce a subordinate clause that adds more detail to the main clause.
Yes, you should use a comma after the word "that" when it introduces a dependent clause in a sentence. This helps clarify the relationship between the main clause and the dependent clause.
A clause can only be part of a larger sentence. "Might is right" is a sentence by itself. With the verb "to be," the word "right" is a predicate adjective.