English, asked by neelu37, 10 months ago

write a note on adverbial clause of reason​

Answers

Answered by tanvi3221
7

An adverbial clause of reason answers the question “Why?” A reason clause is introduced by the subordinate conjunctions like because, since, and as.

Because

Because is used when the reason is the most important part of the sentence. Therefore, it is usually put after the main clause.

Example

I couldn’t come to your party because I was rather sick.

The car crashed because the driver was careless.

Since and As

Since and as are used when the reason is already well known, or less important than the rest of the sentence. Since is a little more formal than as. Since (often for scientific reasons) and as (often for habitual reasons) often begin the sentence.

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neelu37: thnkuhh guy's
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Answered by Om1vermaking
2

An adverbial clause of reason answers the question “Why?” A reason clause is introduced by the subordinate conjunctions like because, since, and as. Because is used when the reason is the most important part of the sentence. Therefore, it is usually put after the main clause.

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