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The Adjective Clause. Recognize an adjective clause when you see one. Adjective Clause. An adjective clause—also called an adjectival or relative clause—will meet three requirements: First, it will contain a subject and verb
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The Adjective Clause Recognize an adjective clause when you see one.
Adjective Clause • An adjective clause—also called an adjectival or relative clause—will meet three requirements: • First, it will contain a subject and verb • Next, it will begin with a relative pronoun [who, whom, whose, that, or which] or a relative adverb [when, where, or why]. • Finally, it will function as an adjective, answering the questions What kind?How many? or Which one?
Examples • Whose big, brown eyes pleaded for another cookie • Whose = relative pronoun; eyes = subject; pleaded = verb. • Why Fred cannot stand sitting across from his sister Melanie • Why = relative adverb; Fred = subject; can stand = verb [not, an adverb, is not officially part of the verb].
Adjective Phrases In Use • Diane felt manipulated by her beagle Santana, whose big, brown eyes pleaded for another cookie. • Chewing with her mouth open is one reason why Fred cannot stand sitting across from his sister Melanie.
Assessment • Growling ferociously, Oreo and Skeeter, Madison's two dogs, competed for the hardboiled egg that bounced across the kitchen floor. • Laughter erupted from Annamarie, who hiccupped for seven hours afterward.
Answers • Growling ferociously, Oreo and Skeeter, Madison's two dogs, competed for the hardboiled egg that bounced across the kitchen floor. • Laughter erupted from Annamarie, who hiccupped for seven hours afterward.
The Adverb Clause Recognize an adverb clause when you see one.
Adverb Clause • An adverb clause will meet three requirements. • First, it will contain a subject and verb. • You will also find a subordinate conjunction that keeps the clause from expressing a complete thought. • Finally, you will notice that the clause answers one of these three adverb questions: How?When? or Why?
How, When, Why? • Tommy scrubbed the bathroom tile until his arms ached. • How did Tommy scrub?
Assessment • Underline the adverb clause. In your answers, include a ‘how’, ‘when’, or ‘why’ question. Ex.. “How did Tommy scrub?” • 1. Josephine's three cats bolted from the driveway once they saw her car turn the corner. • 2. After her appointment at the orthodontist, Danielle cooked eggs for dinner because she could easily chew an omelet.
Answer • Josephine's three cats bolted from the driveway once they saw her car turn the corner. • When did the cats bolt? Once they saw her car turn the corner, an adverb clause. • After her appointment at the orthodontist, Danielle cooked eggs for dinner because she could easily chew an omelet. • Why did Danielle cook eggs? Because she could easily chew an omelet, an adverb clause.
The Noun Clause Recognize an noun clause when you see one.
Overview (Of Everything) • A sentence which contains just one clause is called a simple sentence. • A sentence which contains one independent clause and one or more dependent clauses is called a complex sentence. (Dependent clauses are also called subordinate clauses.) • There are three basic types of dependent clauses: adjective clauses, adverb clauses, and noun clauses. (Adjective clauses are also called relative clauses.)
Noun clauses perform the same functions in sentences that nouns do: • A noun clause can be a subject of a verb: • What Billy did shocked his friends. • A noun clause can be an object of a verb: • What Billy did shocked his friends. • A noun clause can be a subject complement: • Billy’s mistake was that he refused to take lessons. • A noun clause can be an object of a preposition: • Mary is not responsible for what Billy did. • A noun clause (but not a noun) can be an adjective complement: Everybody is sad that Billy drowned.
Activity Part 1. • Finish these phrases with nouns • 1. I don’t know _________________. • 2. I love _________________. • 3. I remember _____________. • 4. _______________ is fun.
A noun clause REPLACES a noun. In other words, a noun clause is a multi-word noun. • Replace the nouns from Activity Pt. 1 with a noun clause. • 1. I don’t know _________________. • 2. I love _________________. • 3. I remember _____________. • 4. ______________ is fun.