A dependent clause relies on the rest of the sentence to form a complete thought. It cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it is a sentence fragment that lacks a subject, verb, or both.
No, a dependent clause does not express a complete thought on its own. It relies on an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
A sentence is defined as a group of words that express a complete thought and that can stand alone. A dependent clause, whether or not it has a subject, does not express a complete thought because it is dependent on the independent clause to help it stand. And a clause has to have a subject, and a verb, or else it is defined as a phrase.
A dependent clause contains a subject and a verb but needs to be attached to an independent clause to form a complete sentence. It does not express a complete thought on its own and relies on the independent clause for context and meaning.
An independent clause is a grammatical structure that can stand alone as a complete sentence and express a complete thought. It contains a subject and a predicate and does not require additional information to make sense.
A subordinate clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it does not express a complete thought. It depends on an independent clause to form a complete sentence. Subordinate clauses usually act as adverbs, adjectives, or nouns in a sentence.
No, a dependent clause does not express a complete thought on its own. It relies on an independent clause to form a complete sentence.
A subordinate clause is a clause that can not stand alone as a complete sentence, because it does not express a complete thought
An Independent clause is independent or main clause expresses a complete thought and can stand by itself as a sentence. An Subordinate clause is a subordinate (or dependent) clause does not express a complete thought and cannot stand by itself as a complete sentence.
A sentence is defined as a group of words that express a complete thought and that can stand alone. A dependent clause, whether or not it has a subject, does not express a complete thought because it is dependent on the independent clause to help it stand. And a clause has to have a subject, and a verb, or else it is defined as a phrase.
A dependent clause contains a subject and a verb but needs to be attached to an independent clause to form a complete sentence. It does not express a complete thought on its own and relies on the independent clause for context and meaning.
An independent clause is a grammatical structure that can stand alone as a complete sentence and express a complete thought. It contains a subject and a predicate and does not require additional information to make sense.
No. A fragment does not express a complete thought, and could be a very long phrase or clause: "Jumping merrily from tree to tree as they went" is a fragment (object without predicate). A complete sentence might be only one or two words: "Wait." "He jumped." "Where's Waldo?"
An independent clause, also known as a simple sentence, is a clause that can stand alone and express a complete thought.
A subordinate clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence because it does not express a complete thought. It depends on an independent clause to form a complete sentence. Subordinate clauses usually act as adverbs, adjectives, or nouns in a sentence.
Yes, a sentence has to have at least one independent clause, expressing a complete thought w/o depending on another. This means that a sentence could be made up of only one independent clause. Perhaps it does not express the complete thought you wanted to portray when you were righting the sentence, though, which is why you would then either write a new sentence or add a dependent clause, one that only makes sense with the independent clause.
A dependent clause needs at least a subject and a verb in order to make a complete sentence.
Only an independent clause can stand independently. A dependent clause is dependent on an independent clause.