Skills 1-5 One Clause
Skills 1-5 One Clause
What is a clause?
A clause is a group of words that has a subject and a verb.
Every sentence has at least one clause. Some have more.
These sentences have one clause:
[Kittens are cute.]
[The students have been studying in the library.]
These sentences have more than one clause:
[Kittens are cute,] [but spiders arent.] (2 clauses)
[The students [who have been studying] are tired]
[because studying is hard work.] (3 clauses)
plural
singular
Be careful of appositives.
An appositive is a noun that comes before or after another
noun and has the same meaning. It gives more information
about the noun.
[The teacher, (Mr. Smith,) forgot to grade the tests.]
appositive
Be careful of appositives.
An appositive usually has commas around it.
An appositive is not the subject of the sentence. The noun
that the appositive describes is the subject.
[The teacher, (Mr. Smith,) forgot to grade the tests.]
subject
1
3
past
participle
be+ing
1
5
Summary
In this section, you have learned about these things:
Every clause needs a subject and a verb.
The verb needs to match its subject.
You need to be able to find the subject of a clause.
You need to be able to find the main verb of a
clause.