English, asked by psgoswamikgpgmailcom, 10 months ago

mita has stood first in the examination. she lives next door
( using adjective clause) %​

Answers

Answered by hastag8
3

Answer:

Mita, who lives next door has stood first in the examination.

Explanation:

An adjective clause is a dependent clause that, like an adjective, modifies a noun or pronoun. An adjective clause begin with words such as that, when, where, who, whom, whose, which, and why. An essential (or restrictive) adjective clause provides information that is necessary for identifying the word it modifies.

One example:

Step 1: Find the two words that are refer to the same thing.

I study at a college. The college is downtown.

Step 2: Replace the second word with a correct relative pronoun (that/which/who/when/where…)

I study at a college. The college WHICH is downtown.

Step 3: Move the whole {adjective clause} behind the noun it modifies.

I study at a college {which is downtown}.

The adjective clause is ‘which is downtown.’

Similar questions