A adjective clause is a is a dependent clause used as an adjective. Most of the time it begins with pronoun for a example which.
So it would most be essential when your "looking at a sentence that starts with a pronoun (most likely in a short story) and it sounds more of a question. It would also be a dependent clause and would function as an adjective as in <span>answering questions</span> for example: Which one?"
Hope this helps!
We drove along the river and into the village
Answer:
the answer is c he is the leader who incited the mexican people to revolution and the reenactment of his speech is the highlight of the annual mexican independence celebrations
Explanation
i did the test lol its C
Answer:
You are gonna hate me for this but I'll give you one I wrote last year in English
Explanation:
Shrek is very green
Dripping from the rooftops
You will be drafted
...yeah its a very good haiku.
The only sentence which is not a proposition is Sit down, because this is imperative, you are ordering somebody to do something, whereas propositions merely inform.