Subordination in grammar refers to the process by which we link two clauses inside a sentence making one dependent on the other. It's constructed by a main<u> or independent clause, and a subordinated clause</u> that is attached to it by an adverb or an adjective.
Here are a few examples:
"While Bobby was in school, his dad prepared lunch in the house" (adverbial subordinate clause)
"All the pets jumped around with joy when Bobby got back home" (adverbial subordinate clause)
"Bobby, who was the best student, always got to pick dessert" (adjectival subordinate clause)
"They lived in his grandma's house, which she had built with her own hands" (adjectival subordinate clause)
Hope this helps!
yes its constantly changing because just look at how we went from cavemen to using telephones and ot
her electronics. so that is why my answer is yes
The finishing point constructed by Twain is: when the old man is about to finish the story of Jim Smiley's jumping frog, another individual interrupts him. The narrator tries to leave the place, but the old man reaches it. The story ends with the old man who starts telling the narrator about a yellow cow with only one eye of Jim Smiley.
The first apparant theme in Rapunzel is that forbidden temptations may cost you something you truly love. In the beginning of the story, Rapunzel's mother was "standing by [the] window and looking down into the garden, when she saw a bed which was planted with the most beautiful rampion, and it looked so fresh and green that she longed for it" (1). This already shows bad temptation, considering that the rampion is not hers, therefore she shouldn't take it without asking. She asked her husband to get her some, going as far as saying "if I can't eat some of the rampion . . . I shall die" (1). The husband complied, although he knows it is a wrong thing to do, shown when he thinks to himself, "bring her some of the rampion yourself, let it cost what it will" (1).