The relative pronoun who - it introduces adjective clauses, referring to a person.
Sure, I can use a conjunction like 'while' or 'although' to introduce an adverbial clause that provides additional information about an action or situation. Let me know if you would like me to demonstrate it with an example sentence.
Shortly is not a verb but instead is an adverb. An adverb is used to modify another adverb, phrase, clause, adjective or a verb. An example of shortly used in a sentence is, she left shortly after he did.
No, the correct grammar would be "James read that the school had burned." The word "that" is needed to introduce the clause about what James read.
The word 'that' is a pronoun, an adjective, an adverb, and a conjunction.The pronoun 'that' is a demonstrative pronoun and a relative pronoun.A demonstrative pronoun takes the place of a noun, indicating near or far in place or time.The demonstrative pronouns are: this, that, these, those.Example: I would like some of that.A relative pronoun introduces a relative clause; a relative pronoun "relates" to the word that it modifies, providing additional information about the antecedent without starting another sentence.The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.Example: The shoes that I bought will match the new suit.The word 'that' is an adjective (determiner) when placed before a noun to describe the noun as a specific one.Example: I like that color.The word 'that' is an adverb when used to modify a verb, an adjective, or an adverb as to such an extent.Example: The trip won't take that long.The word 'that' is a conjunction when used to connect words, phrases, clauses, or sentences.Example: It was the first time that my parents came for a visit.
"While talking" is an adverb clause; it describes in what circumstance (how/when) the teacher knocked over his glass, the PM sneezed, the newscaster skilfully pointed out the fronts without even looking at them, or whatever. An adjective clause describes the subject of the sentence (ex.: "The quetzal, native to South America, is viridian to teal in colour."), and you can think of a noun clause as any phrase that represents a single person/place/thing (ex.: "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself", "Anyone who would stoop to that low is despicable", "I've never condoned that sort of thing", "That thing the NSDAP called nationalism frightens me"). Noun and adjective clauses can get a little sketchy sometimes, but I don't think that's in the scope of this question.
'Where they would be protected from the wind' is an adverbial clause, a group of words that contains a subject (they) and a verb (be protected) but is not a complete thought, not a complete sentence.An adverbial clause is a dependent clause that functions as an adverb; the entire clause modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.
Yes, the adverb clause "although the ostrich is a bird" would be followed by a comma.
An elliptical adverb clause is one that omits words that may be understood. For example, in the sentence "he is more knowledgeable than I" the pronoun I is used because the full clause would be "than I am knowledgeable." The same applies for an omitted subject: "He was more startled than scared" omits the words "he was" before scared.
The words are not a combined form. The word "away" is an adverb, and the word from (a preposition) would introduce a noun (the object) indicating what something was to be away from.
No, neither word is an adjective. Always is an adverb and stops is a verb.The words could be part of a subordinate clause, but it would almost certainly be adverbial.
An adverb phrase is two or more words that act as an adverb. It would be modified by an adverb or another adverb phrase.
An adverb phrase is two or more words that act as an adverb. It would be modified by an adverb or another adverb phrase.
Sure, I can use a conjunction like 'while' or 'although' to introduce an adverbial clause that provides additional information about an action or situation. Let me know if you would like me to demonstrate it with an example sentence.
It can be. But wherever is usually a conjunction that connects an adverb clause. e.g. "You see them wherever you go." The rare case of wherever being an adverb would be an as exaggerated version of the word "where" - e.g. "Wherever did he go?"
The contraction there'd is a shortened form for the adverb 'here' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'would'. The contraction there'd functions as the verb in a sentence or clause. Examples:I was told there would be a late fee. Or, I was told there'd be a late fee.
The bolded words "where they would be protected from the wind" form a subordinate (or dependent) clause. Specifically, it is an adjective clause that modifies the noun "tomatoes" by providing additional information about their location. This clause cannot stand alone as a complete sentence and relies on the main clause for its meaning.
3 adverbs & a main independent clause ex: Before the sun had risen Before the waves grew calm AND Before the kids came out to play The surfer rode his first wave (make sure and remember the AND in line 3