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31 Ιαν 2022 · Adverb, Adjective, Noun Clauses Examples and Exercises I. ADVERB CLAUSES. Study the groups of words in italics in the following sentences: They started at [Started when?] They started when morning came. [Started when?] In sentence 1, the group of words in italics, at dawn, does the work of an Adverb. It tells us when the action was done.
There are several types of dependent clauses, also known as subordinate clauses. They are relative clauses, noun clauses, and adverbial clauses. They are called 'dependent' as they need an independent clause to make sense.
Unlike adjective and adverbial clauses, noun clauses (also known as content clauses) do not modify sentence phrases but instead replace them. Much like a noun phrase, a noun clause can be the subject or object of a sentence, naming people, places, things and ideas.
What are Noun, Adjective and Adverb Clauses? Noun, adjective and adverb clauses are three different types of clauses. A clause is a part of a sentence. Some clauses are independent, while other clauses rely on another clause to make sense.
An adjective clause functions as an adjective (modifies a noun or pronoun); an adverb clause functions as an adverb (describes a verb, adjective or other adverb); a noun clause is used as a noun (subject of a verb, direct object, indirect object, predicate nominative or object of the preposition).
Clauses act as parts of speech – for example nouns or adjectives. "Here is the girl who got the job." "Here is the girl" is the main clause. "who got the job" is the subordinate clause. It is an adjective clause. It serves as an adjective (it describes the girl). "He hoped that nothing bad will happen." "He hoped" is the main clause.
Typically a main clause is made up of a subject (s) (a noun phrase) and a verb phrase (v). Sometimes the verb phrase is followed by other elements, e.g objects (o), complements (c), adjuncts (ad). These other elements are sometimes essential to complete the meaning of the clause: [S] Sarah [V] smiled. [S] Jo [V] doesn’t feel [C] well.
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