Math, asked by moumitasurai, 3 months ago

how to find out noun clause from a sentence​

Answers

Answered by parikshittomar81
1

Answer:

the sentence is “Give whoever answers the door the package,” then you can see that the noun clause is “whoever answers the door.” The verb is “give” and the direct object is “the package,” so the indirect object is the noun clause.

Answered by aradhyasingh7101
0

A noun clause functions as a noun in a sentence. It follows a linking or copular verb to describe or modify the subject of the sentence. Unlike noun phrases, noun clauses contain both a subject and a verb.

Noun clause examples include:

Do you know what time it is?

Tom can invite whomever he chooses.

I don’t understand what you’re talking about.

Whether Roman accepts the job or not is his business.

The bolded noun clauses are dependent clauses. Unlike independent clauses, they can’t stand alone as full sentences. Noun clauses function to add more details to a sentence. If you’re not sure whether a clause is a noun clause, try replacing it with other nouns or pronouns.

For example:

Do you know it?

Tom can invite her.

I don’t understand him.

It is his business.

If the sentence is “Give whoever answers the door the package,” then you can see that the noun clause is “whoever answers the door.” The verb is “give” and the direct object is “the package,” so the indirect object is the noun clause.

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