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DiKsa [7]
2 years ago
13

Nobody expected that he would die...... find the subordinate clause...... and the kind of subordinate clause..... ​

English
1 answer:
Ivan2 years ago
6 0

Answer: clause

Explanation:

A clause is a part of a larger sentence containing a subject and a predicate of its own.

A Principal Clause is an independent clause which can exist even without a subordinate clause. A Subordinate Clause is called a dependent clause because it cannot exist without the help of the principal clause. It begins with a subordinating conjunction.

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Read the following excerpt from Dr King’s “I have a dream” speech:
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Dr. King refers to peaceful protest when referencing the "majestic heights".  He describes peaceful protest as meeting physical force with soul force, or the will to see that justice is enacted through nonviolent means. This is truly a difficult thing to accomplish in the face of brutal injustice, and is a majestic height to reach indeed. Dr. King proved that such heights could be reached, and that real progress toward equality could be made by nonviolent means. 

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3 years ago
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PLEASE HELP!! (subject)+(be verb)+(subject complement [noun phrase])
Bess [88]

Exercise 1

1. My neighbor is uncommonly thrifty.

My neighbor - subject

is - present tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

uncommonly - adverbial

thrifty - subject complement (adjective)

2. The Oldsmobile was on its last legs

The Oldsmobile - subject

was - past tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

on its last legs - adverbial

3. Celia is the CEO of a large multinational corporation.

Celia - subject

is - present tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

the CEO of a large multinational corporation - subject complement (noun phrase)

4. The last performance of Death of a Salesman was on Friday.

The last performance of Death of a Salesman - subject

was -  past tense of the verb <em>to be </em>

on Friday - adverbial

5. The plumber will be here soon.

The plumber - subject

will be - future tense of the verb <em>to be</em>

here - adverbial

soon - adverbial

Exercise 2

1. The taxi driver seemed like a nice man.

The taxi driver - subject

seemed - linking verb (past tense)

like a nice man - subject complement (noun phrase)

2. The inside of the bakery smells delicious.

The inside of the bakery - subject

smells - linking verb (present tense)

delicious - subject complement (adjective)

3. On that day, Francis became a criminal.

On that day - adverbial

Francis - subject

became - linking verb (past tense)

a criminal - subject complement (noun phrase)

4. It sounds like a good idea!

It - subject

sounds - linking verb (present tense)

like a good idea - subject complement (noun phrase)

5. Ms. Yeziersky became a schoolteacher.

Ms. Yeziersky - subject

became - linking verb (past tense)

a schoolteacher - subject complement (noun phrase)

In all examples, we have an equation:

subject = noun phrase (what?)

               adjective (how?)

               adverbial (when? where? how? etc.)

To define if a subject complement is a noun phrase or an adjective, we always think of the main word:

like a nice man (noun phrase because everything modifies the noun MAN)

uncommonly thrifty (<em>uncommonly</em> modifies <em>thrifty</em> so it is an adjective).

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Hello!

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________________________________________________________

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Green apples, which are best for baking, are sometimes baked into pies.

i don’t understand your question ?

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