English, asked by ManishRealHero, 10 months ago

examples of adjective clause​

Answers

Answered by asimkhan33329
5

Answer:

An adjective clause—also called an adjectival or relative clause—will meet three requirements: First, it will contain a subject and verb. Next, it will begin with a relative pronoun [who, whom, whose, that, or which] or a relative adverb [when, where, or why].

EXAMPLES:

➡️I like pizza,'which' is also the favorite of my sister Jean.

➡️The lady 'who' lives across the street is my aunt.

➡️The reason 'why' I left is a secret.

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Answered by Darkblaze123
3

ANSWER

There is no subject pronoun in the adjective clause.

Wrong I thanked the man gave me the direction.

Right I thanked the man who gave me the direction.

The auxiliary verb (be or have) is left out in the adjective clause.

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