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Clauses There Are Two Types of Clauses

There are two types of clauses: main clauses and subordinate clauses. Main clauses can stand alone as a complete sentence, while subordinate clauses cannot stand alone and must be combined with a main clause. Subordinate clauses include adverbial clauses, which begin with subordinating conjunctions, and adjectival clauses, which begin with relative pronouns and provide additional information about a noun. Clauses can also be classified based on their structure, such as verbless clauses where the verb is implied, non-finite verb clauses which do not show tense distinctions, and embedded clauses which are clauses within other clauses.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
74 views

Clauses There Are Two Types of Clauses

There are two types of clauses: main clauses and subordinate clauses. Main clauses can stand alone as a complete sentence, while subordinate clauses cannot stand alone and must be combined with a main clause. Subordinate clauses include adverbial clauses, which begin with subordinating conjunctions, and adjectival clauses, which begin with relative pronouns and provide additional information about a noun. Clauses can also be classified based on their structure, such as verbless clauses where the verb is implied, non-finite verb clauses which do not show tense distinctions, and embedded clauses which are clauses within other clauses.

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AmirShams
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© © All Rights Reserved
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CLAUSES

There are two types of clauses:

 A main (independent) clause: stands alone as a complete sentence, for example ‘Rick came first'. However,
an independent clause may be joined to other independent clauses with a conjunction (and, but, nor, or, yet)
to result in a compound sentence, for example, when joined to ‘He was exhausted’ the compound sentence
is, Rick came first but he was exhausted.
 A subordinate clause (also known as a dependent clause) is a group of words that cannot stand alone or
make complete sense on it s own. It needs to be combined with a main clause and joined using a
subordinating conjunction or a relative pronoun to form a complete sentence. Subordinate clauses will
usually be adverbial or adjectival clauses.
o Adverbial clauses start with a subordinating conjunction.
o Adjectival clauses add extra information to a noun or pronoun and start with a relative pronoun: who, whoever,
whose, whom, whomever, which, that. In certain situations, “what,” “when,” and “where” can function as relative
pronouns.
 The person who has the winning number wins the jackpot.
 This is the cake that Elizabeth baked.
 My cousin, whose child you just met, is a dentist.
 The teacher asked the students whom she believed to be the most reliable and talented to audition.
 The car, which was a little red Corvette, tooted its horn.
NB: In the following sentence whichever acts as a determiner identifying the letter:
 I will open whichever letter arrives first.
o Verbless clauses have the verb (usually a form of 'to be') implied but not stated. These clauses are usually adverbial.
For example: Anthony believes the prisoner innocent. (Anthony believes that the prisoner is innocent.)
o Non-finite verb clauses start with a present participle or contain an infinitive. They do not show a distinction in
tense.
 The main types of non-finite verbs are
 infinitives (the infinitive of a verb is its basic form with to ('to do')
 –ing forms, also known as present participles which complete progressive verbs, for example: Adolescents
like to play on computers. Playing on computers, they spent the day engrossed. Having played on computers
all day, they were hungry and tired.
NB: Verbs ending in –ing can also act as gerunds which function as nouns either as a subject, direct objects,
indirect objects, and objects of prepositions, for example, Dancing is fun, I am watching boxing, He started
with training.
o Embedded clauses are clauses inside other clauses in a complex sentence. Embedded clauses are included in
sentences to ensure brevity and to embellish the information in the main part of the sentence by clarifying
information, giving examples or providing information which it is not essential. This linguistic complexity challenge
is particularly found in technical and scientific writing. Embedded clauses challenge the reader to stop, mid-
sentence, realise there is ‘extra information’, then understand how it is relevant to the main sentence and, finally,
finish the sentence by connecting the first clause and the final clause or clauses.
The following examples are colour coded as follows:
Part of the independent clause, dependent clause, final part of the independent clause

 The boy, who was only seven, could play the piano.
 Most cells, including plant cells, have a nucleus, a cell wall and cytoplasm.
 Electricity travels from the power source, which is a battery, around a series of conductors, back to the power
source.

NB: In the following sentence whoever is a pronoun. Whoever spilled milk is an embedded noun clause,
which acts as a participant in the main clause, rather than a dependent clause.

 Whoever spilled milk will have to clean it up.

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