a verb
The whole sentence is an independent clause. Unless...... if you were trying to say: You burned your dinner and you went out to eat.This would me 2 independent clause. These would be (you burned your dinner) and (you went out to eat)
Grammatically, a clause is a group of words in a sentence containing a subject and a predicate of its own to give a full sense to the whole sentence ; for example," I have given my wife a bracelet which is made of platinum. ". In this sentence, the word ' which ' is the subject of the clause whereas ' is made of platinum ' is the predicate of the clause.
The whole main clause in this sentence is "I had to cancel the class."
A clause is basically any kind of phrase within (or as) a sentence. There are independent and dependent clauses. An independent clause is any phrase that can stand alone as its own sentence. For instance, in the sentence "Jane and I were walking when we saw the dog," the first portion "Jane and I were walking" would be an independent clause. A dependent clause, however, doesn't make sense when taken out of the sentence; it is therefore dependent on the sentence as a whole. For instance, "when we saw the dog" would be a dependent clause (here, a prepositional phrase to be more specific) because it does not have the necessary elements of a sentence that an independent clause has.
Yes, in MLA format, you should cite after every sentence when paraphrasing a whole paragraph to give credit to the original source of information.
"You passed" can be a statement (you did not fail).When used as an adjective clause, it omits the relative pronoun (that or who):The bus (that) you passed is full of tourists.The runner (whom) you passed in the race is the former state champion.You should qualify for advanced placement based on the test (that) you passed.
No unless the sentence before takes up the whole line.
A clause can be a sentence if it has a subject and a verb but not all clauses do.A clause is a unit structured around a verb phrase.If you need an example of a clause (this is a conditional clause), see the link below.'However, there is a slight clause to the contract.'
This clause is called the elastic clause. Obviously, the Framers of the Constitution could not include every single power Congress had, for that would be infinite, but by saying this, they can allow Congress to make anything that will help the nation as a whole, even if it is not specifically given to them in the list of powers.
The term 'again sending the missing courier' is an adverbial clause, a dependent clause that functions as an adverb. Note: the part of speech is difficult to determine without the whole sentence to put it in context, especially since the words don't make sense. The rest of the sentence could tell how someone who is missing could then be sent somewhere.
A sentence punctuated as a whole sentence is a compound sentence. This is taught in 3rd grade.
"Whenever" is a conjunction.Conjunctions join sentences (clauses). For example:I drink green tea whenever I feel thirsty."I drink green tea" is the main clause. "I feel thirsty" is a subordinate clause. "Whenever" connects the two clauses, giving a particular meaning to the whole sentence.