An adverbial clause is a group of words that functions as an adverb within a sentence, providing context such as time, reason, condition, or manner. It typically contains a subject and a verb and is introduced by subordinating conjunctions like "because," "although," "if," or "when." For example, in the sentence "She sings beautifully when she is happy," the clause "when she is happy" is an adverbial clause that modifies the verb "sings."
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..
a dependent clause that modifies a noun
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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 alternative term for a main clause is an independent 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.
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.