follest
An introductory word of an adjective clause is a word that introduces the clause and provides context for the noun it is modifying. Common introductory words include who, which, that, whose, whom, where, and when.
The 'introductory' pronoun is 'who', which introduces the relative clause 'who died for you'.Relative pronouns are used to introduce relative clauses; they are: who, whom, whose, which, that.
The sentence "She sings beautifully when she is happy" contains an adverb ("beautifully") that describes the verb "sings" in the noun clause "when she is happy."
i do not know when the flagpole was painted.
No the word introductory is not a noun. It is an adjective.
"Clause" is a noun.
That's it exactly.I assume I have understood your question properly. Let's dig deep with the help of an example:"He knows that a good time is on the way".Sentence Structure:He -> subject of the main clause.Knows -> main verb of the main clause.That a good time is on the way -> dependent clause, in which "a good time" -> subject, "is" -> linking verb, "on the way" -> prepositional phrase acting as an object of the verb "is" and modifying "time".That -> expletive that introduces a sentence: "a good time is on the way."Now let's go back to your question:1- The word "that" is introducing a sentence.2- Yes, this introductory word "that" can be treated as an expletive.BUT be careful. In the below sentence that word "that" is used as a relative pronoun and can not be treated as an expletive. Rather, it is the subject of the dependent clause.He knows the men that can kill the Governor.
i am not so sure
Before the curtain fell, the actors bowed.
A main clause typically follows an introductory phrase or clause. The main clause contains the main subject and verb of the sentence and provides the primary information or action.
a substantive
Yes, a dependent clause is a noun clause. The definition of a clause is a group of words containing a subject noun or pronoun and its verb. Example sentence:John went swimming but Jane didn't.