SUBORDINATE CLAUSES
Subordinate clauses can be adjective clauses, adverb clauses or
noun clauses.
An adjective clause serves the same purpose as an adjective. It says more
about a noun or pronoun.
Adjective clauses are introduced by the relative pronouns who, whom, which,
what, whose or that.
Examples are given below.
·
The man who lives next door is a musician. (Here
the adjective clause ‘who lives next door’ says something about the noun
‘man’.)
·
This is the book that you have been
looking for. (Here the adjective clause ‘that you have been looking for’
says something about the noun book.)
Noun clause
A noun clause serves the same purpose as a noun. It can act as the subject
or object of the verb. It can also act as the object of a preposition. Noun
clauses are usually introduced by the conjunctions that, if or whether.
·
She knows that she will win the first
prize. (Here the noun clause ‘that she will win the first prize’ acts
as the object of the verb ‘knows’.)
Adverb clauses
An adverb clause serves the same purpose as an adverb. It tells you when,
where, why or how something occurs.
·
When I was in school I wanted to be a
writer.
·
They took him to hospital because he was
ill.
·
Unless you speak the truth, you will be in
trouble.
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