Yes, you should use a comma to separate a dependent clause and a verb.
In certain circumstances you can.You should not use a comma to separate a verb from its object, but if there is (for example) a list or an intervening phrase that requires a comma, then it could happen that a comma will follow a verb.For example:Yesterday I bathed, shaved, and excercised.She ate, as far as anyone in the audience could determine, twenty hot dogs.But the following would be WRONG:She ate, twenty hot dogs.Yesterday I bathed, the dog.
A dependent clause needs at least a subject and a verb in order to make a complete sentence.
An independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence; a dependent one cannot. An independent clause (or main clause, matrix clause) is a clause that can stand by itself, also known as a simple sentence. Independent clauses contain a subject and a predicate. Multiple independent clauses can be joined by using a semicolon or a comma plus a coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so). The dog is running down the street = independent clause Because its master called it = dependent clause
A comma should not be used between two independent clauses unless there is a coordinating conjunction connecting them. Commas are also not used before subordinating conjunctions like "because" or "although" when they introduce dependent clauses. Additionally, do not use a comma to separate a subject from its verb within a sentence.
A subject and a verb that cannot stand alone is called a dependent clause. This type of clause relies on an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
In certain circumstances you can.You should not use a comma to separate a verb from its object, but if there is (for example) a list or an intervening phrase that requires a comma, then it could happen that a comma will follow a verb.For example:Yesterday I bathed, shaved, and excercised.She ate, as far as anyone in the audience could determine, twenty hot dogs.But the following would be WRONG:She ate, twenty hot dogs.Yesterday I bathed, the dog.
adverb clause
A dependent clause needs at least a subject and a verb in order to make a complete sentence.
The dependent clause is between the subject ('The man') and the main verb ('was selling').
An independent clause can stand alone as a complete sentence; a dependent one cannot. An independent clause (or main clause, matrix clause) is a clause that can stand by itself, also known as a simple sentence. Independent clauses contain a subject and a predicate. Multiple independent clauses can be joined by using a semicolon or a comma plus a coordinating conjunction (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so). The dog is running down the street = independent clause Because its master called it = dependent clause
A comma should not be used between two independent clauses unless there is a coordinating conjunction connecting them. Commas are also not used before subordinating conjunctions like "because" or "although" when they introduce dependent clauses. Additionally, do not use a comma to separate a subject from its verb within a sentence.
A subject and a verb that cannot stand alone is called a dependent clause. This type of clause relies on an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
An independent clause can stand on its own as a sentence. A dependent clause contains a subject and verb but cannot be a sentence. In the sentence "I'll stop by your office after I finish my lunch", "I'll stop by your office" is an independent clause, and "after I finish my lunch" is a dependent clause.
No, "a blazing fire" is not a dependent clause; it is a noun phrase. A dependent clause contains a subject and a verb but cannot stand alone as a complete sentence. For example, "because it was cold" is a dependent clause, while "a blazing fire" simply describes an object without any additional information.
Yes, a dependent clause contains both a subject and a verb. However, it cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it does not express a complete thought. Instead, it relies on an independent clause to provide context and meaning. For example, in the clause "because I was tired," "I" is the subject and "was" is the verb, but it remains incomplete without additional information.
A clause is a grammatical structure that typically contains a subject and a verb, and can be classified as independent (can stand alone as a complete sentence) or dependent (relies on an independent clause for meaning). Clauses are the building blocks of sentences and help to convey meaning and information in written and spoken language.
A sentence is a complex sentence if there is one Dependent Clause and one Independent Clause. A dependent clause has a subject and a verb/predicate but does not have a complete thought and uses a dependent marker. Some dependent markers are: after, although, as, as if, because, before, even if, even though, if, in order to, since, though, unless, until, whatever, whenever, when, whether and while. An independent clause has a subject and a verb/predicate and has a complete thought and a complex sentence uses a dependent marker.