The dress was long, black, and beautiful. Mary wore it. (Combine using an adjective clause)
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Mary wore a long, black and beautiful dress.
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In this question, we are asked to combine a sentence using an adjective clause.
- Mary wore a long, black and beautiful dress.
- A clause is a set of words, much like a phrase. Contrary to a sentence, a clause is more or less finished. A set of words known as a clause has both a subject and a predicate.
- A clause is a collection of words with a subject and a verb that relate to one another. This connection is essential because a sentence, as opposed to being just a collection of random words, transmits information about what the subject is or is doing.
- An adjective clause is a set of words that changes the sentence's subject or object and consists of a noun and/or verb that is preceded by a relative pronoun. For instance: The kids are incredibly brilliant.
- Dependent clauses with adjectives provide details about nouns. By using relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, where, when, which, that, and why) as connectors, they enable you to integrate two statements into a single one.
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