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They are sometimes called dependent clauses because they "depend" on a main clause to give them meaning

subordinating conjunction are clauses that provide a subordinate clause to a main clause.

example:

Pop stars earn high wages but workers do not earn high wages.

Kinds Of Subordinating Clause

Subordinating Subject Clause(Subject Clause) Answers The Question Who Is It That?

Ex. Whoever Works During the Night Gets to Leave Early

Who Is It That? Gets To Leave

Whoever Works During the Night Gets To Leave Early

Subordinating Direct Clause(Object Clause)Answers The Question Who? Or What?

Ex. The Children Asked why They Weren't Allowed to Join The Camping

The Children Asked what?

The Children Asked why They Weren't Allowed to Join The Camping

There Are Other Kinds Too

Like

Temporal Clause-Subordinating Clause of Time

Locative Clause-Subordinating Clause of Place

Modal Clause-Subordinating Clause of Manner

Purpose Clause-Subordinating Clause of Purpose

Conditional Clause-Subordinating Clause of Condition

Result Clause-Subordinating Clause of Result

Concessive Clause-Subordinating Clause of Concession

Causal Clause-Subordinating Clause of Cause

Hope this is helpful! :DDDD

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10y ago

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Related Questions

What is the difference between a subordinate clause and subordinate clause?

There isn't a difference between a subordinate clause and a subordinate clause.


Do you need a comma when the clause begins with a subordinate conjunction?

Yes, a comma is generally needed when a subordinate clause begins with a subordinate conjunction. The comma is used to separate the subordinate clause from the main clause.


What is the subordinate clause in The main road was closed after the bridge collapsed?

"After the bridge collapsed" is the subordinate clause. It begins with "after", a subordinate conjunction, and it cannot stand alone as a sentence. A subordinate clause is also called a dependent clause.


What type of conjunction begins a subordinate clause?

A subordinating conjunction begins a subordinate clause. It connects the subordinate clause to the main clause and shows the relationship between the two. Examples of subordinating conjunctions include "although," "because," and "if."


What are examples of a subordinate conjunction?

Although there are many subordinate conjunctions, the most common are "and", "but", and "or". A subordinate conjunction connects a subordinate clause (a clause that cannot stand alone as a sentence) to a main clause (a complete sentence).


What is a clause that needs another clause to make sense?

Subordinate clauseA subordinate (or dependent) clause is a clause that needs another clause. Unlike independent clauses it cannot stand alone. The word because is usually a good indicator of a subordinate clause.


When a comma is necessary to set apart a subordinate clause and when it is not?

If you have the subordinate clause before the main clause, you write a comma. However, the rules are a bit different for relative pronouns connecting main and subordinate clause.


When is a comma necessary to set apart a subordinate clause and when is it not?

If you have the subordinate clause before the main clause, you write a comma. However, the rules are a bit different for relative pronouns connecting main and subordinate clause.


What is main clause and subordinate clause give an example?

A main clause = it is independent, i.e. it does not depend on any other sentence. A subordinate clause = a sentence depending on/subordinated to a another sentence, either a main clause or another subordinate clause. (you ask the main clause a question and you answer with the subordinate). e.g. "Can you tell me/ (the main clause) when the book was written?" ( the subordinate clause = a Direct Object). or "This is the book/ that I told you about". (the second clause is an Attributive or a Relative Clause). or If she had know this, / she wouldn't have trusted him." (the first sentence is an If Clause or a Conditional).


Examples of subordinate clauses?

Subordinate clauses are clauses that cannot stand alone because it does not express a complete thought. Examples of a subordinate clause include, "Until she had her cup of coffee" and "Since that fateful day in January".


Is 'he has not played tennis'a subordinate clause?

there is no subordinate conjunction (because, after, therefore, even though, etc) so it is not a subordinate clause. if you look at it and it could be a complete sentence on it's own and make sense, it's not a subordinate clause.


What keeps a subordinate clause from being a complete sentence?

A subordinate clause has a verb and another sentence within it.../././././././././.