English, asked by meghna239, 1 day ago

Place The Table. You May Place It Anywhere.

Joining the sentences with adverbial clause . ​

Answers

Answered by up24009
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Explanation:

There are three types of dependent clauses: noun clauses, relative clauses, and adverbial clauses.

While noun clauses can replace any noun in a sentence, relative and adverbial clauses modify words already in the sentence instead of replacing them.

Noun clauses are dependent clauses that can replace subjects, objects, or subject complements in sentences. These clauses start with either interrogative pronouns or expletives.

For example:

Rafiki encouraged Simba to remember who he was.

In this sentence, the noun clause, who he was, is acting as an indirect object of the verb, encouraged.

Relative clauses are dependent clauses that modify or give more information about a noun in the independent clause.

For example:

The lime green suit that I bought in Paris looks stunning on him.

In this sentence, the relative clause that I bought in Paris modifies the subject, suit, by identifying which suit is being referred to by the speaker.

Additionally, adverbial clauses are dependent clauses that modify or give more information about a verb in the independent clause.

For example:

After the storm passed, we went outside to survey the damage.

In this sentence, the adverbial clause after the storm passed modifies the verb went by showing when the action of the sentence took place.

For this post, we will focus on adverbial clauses, but you can learn more about noun clauses and relative clauses on the Albert blog. When you’re ready, test yourself with a quiz and practice with our high-quality, standards-aligned questions here.

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