A subordinate clause, also known as a dependent clause, is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb but does not express a complete thought and cannot stand alone as a sentence. It is typically introduced by a subordinating conjunction (such as "although," "because," or "if") or a relative pronoun (like "who," "which," or "that"). Subordinate clauses provide additional information and rely on a main clause to form a complete sentence. For example, in the sentence "Although it was raining, we went for a walk," "Although it was raining" is the subordinate clause.
Another name for the Elastic Clause is the Necessary and Proper Clause.
An objective clause is a clause which is like a learning objective but this is the objective for an clause
Restrictive Clause is the other name of relative clause..
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a dependent clause that modifies a noun
It can be an independent clause or a dependent clause. It is an independent clause if does not have a word at the beginning like "but" or "because". If there is a word like this at the beginning of the clause, it is a dependent clause.
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.
An alternative term for a main clause is an independent clause.
A dependent clause.
main clause; subordinate clause
it is claws that is the homophone for clause
There isn't a difference between a subordinate clause and a subordinate clause.