That is an easy one they are the supremacy clause and the proper clause
a complete subject and a complete predicate
There are two kinds of clauses and three types of clauses in the English language. The two kinds are independent and dependent. An independent clause consists of a subject and a predicate that represent a complete thought. Dependent clauses depend on independent clauses to make complete sense. the three dependent clauses are noun clauses, adjective clauses, and adverb clauses.
The three types of dependent clauses are adjective, adverb, and noun
Adverbial subordinate clauses, adjectival subordinate clauses, and nominal subordinate clauses.
Civil Rights Bills
The three dress-ups in writing are: 1. "who-which" clauses 2. "ly" clauses 3. "because" clauses
This question is irrelevant; it has no relation whatsoever to Google.
Yes. two independent clauses can be joined by a conjunction.
The two types of compound sentences are coordinated compound sentences, where independent clauses are joined by a coordinating conjunction, and subordinated compound sentences, where independent clauses are joined by a subordinating conjunction.
Words that connect words, phrases, sentences and clauses are called conjunction. It has three types namely coordinatingconjunctions,subordinating conjunctions and correlative conjunctions.Coordinating (connect independent clauses) - there are 7: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, soSubordinating (connect dependent clauses) - there are many such as when, though, and because.Correlative conjunctions (pairs) - examples are either/or, neither/nor, both/and, not only/but
1. adjective clauses 2. phrases 3. appositives 4. adverb clauses
Relative clauses should be matched with "who" clauses, which serve as the subject of the sentence and provide additional information about a person. For example, "The man who won the race is my friend." In this sentence, "who won the race" is a relative clause that provides more detail about "the man."