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Re: Help please! Subordinate or main clause
Nobody said it was not a clause! There are several bits of terminology that are confusing. One set of terms applies to the individual words. 'house' is a noun . 'happy' is an adjective . 'quietly' is an adverb . And so on. Another set of terms applies to groups of words...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
CalifJim
yesterday 5:27 pm
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Re: Simple, short phrase question.
Note that the noun phrase contains a (relative) clause, and it is also contained within a larger clause in each case above. CJ P.S. Part of your frustration may be because not all writers use the terms ''phrase' and 'clause' (and others) completely consistently at all...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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CalifJim
3 days ago 6:42 am
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Re: what type of grammer pattern behind this sentence?
A U.S. newspaper: -> subject, main clause says -> verb, main clause. The rest of the sentence is a dependent clause, direct object of "says" nation's two highest-ranking intelligence officials -> noun phrase, subject, dependent clause expect ->...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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AlpheccaStars
19 days ago
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Re: functional names
It -- S will make -- V them -- DO wise -- Object Complement The topic of complements is a broad and complex one, but here is a good basic introduction from an on-line source : Complement A complement is used with verbs like be, seem, look etc. Complements give more information about the...
ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
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Mister Micawber
1 yr ago
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Re: The meaning of 'Gonna'
What is the word sucks in " Homework sucks " ? Is it a verb or an adjective? If it is a verb, what does homework suck? This brings up an excellent point, and a wonderful opportunity to discover the beautiful syntactic structure of the English language. The question at hand is " Does an English...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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Anonymous
2 yr 308 days ago
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Re: sentence analysis in terms of function and form
There are often optional ways of looking at sentence structure, but here are my opinions: 1. She | tried phoning | his home number, | but | he | didn´t answer. Subject | Verb | Direct object / noun phrase | conj. | subject | verb - Could "but he didn´t answer" be a clause?-- YES,...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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Mister Micawber
3 yr 11 days ago
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sentence analysis of phrasal verbs
Dear teachers, Would you please help me to solve this problem? Example 1 : I have been looking for you everywhere. "Parsing" = sentence analysis (correct use ?) Form + Function : I = Noun Phrase = subject have been looking = Verb Phrase = transitive verb for you = Prepositional Phrase you =...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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Hela
3 yr 57 days ago
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Re: The difference between a phrase and a sentence (Chris)
A sentence may take the form of a single clause or be formed from several clauses. The typical clause has a noun phrase for a subject and a verb phrase for a predicate. The verb phrase may have another noun phrase or two embedded within it which serves as direct object or indirect object....
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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CalifJim
3 yr 79 days ago
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Re: to be parsed
Hello K.O. That looks good - here's a little more detail: Clause 1 We - subject were spared - passive voice , past tense the storm's fury - noun phrase, object (the storm's - possessive; fury - direct object) Clause 2 but - coordinating conjunction now - adverb are...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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MrPedantic
3 yr 90 days ago
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Re: Sentence analyze
Dear teachers, What do you think of the following analysis, is it correct ? The children looked at the boy inquisitively. FORM: FUNCTION: The children = noun phrase subject looked at = verb phrase transitive (phrasal) verb (?) the boy = noun phrase direct object inquisitively =...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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hela
3 yr 275 days ago
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