A Grammar Revision on ( Phrases , Clauses, Sentences , Predicates , Nominatives and Objects )
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A Grammar Revision on ( An Adjective Phrase / An Adverb Phrase / Subject&Verb of A Clause /
An Independent Clause / Simple , Compound &Complex Sentences / An Adjective Clause / An Adverb Clause / Predicate Adjective / Predicate Nominative / A Direct Object / An Indirect Object )
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An adjective phrase is a group of words that acts as an adjective in a sentence to give more information about a noun or pronoun.
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An adverbial phrase (or adverb phrase) is a group of words that acts as an adverb to modify the main clause of a sentence. Adverbial phrases can be made up of two adverbs. These are typically formed by adding a qualifier or intensifier (e.g., “incredibly,” “rather,” “very,” “somewhat”) before another adverb.
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Independent clause: A group of words that contains a subject, a verb, and expresses a complete thought. An independent clause can often stand as a sentence by itself.
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A dependent clause is a group of words that contains a subject and verb but does not express a complete thought.
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A simple sentence is a single independent clause with a subject and predicate. Simple sentences convey a complete thought, but they do not contain any dependent clauses (also known as subordinate clauses)
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A compound sentence consists of two or more independent clauses, usually joined by a comma and a connecting word.
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A complex sentence contains one independent clause and at least one subordinate clause.
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Adjective clauses are dependent clauses that give information about nouns. They allow you to combine two sentences into one by using relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, where, when, which, that, and why) as connectors. WHO (used for people as subjects)
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An adverbial clause, sometimes referred to as an adverb clause, is a group of words that, together, functions as an adverb. This means that the clause describes or modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb.
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Linking verbs 🎈connect a subject to its predicate and provide more information about the subject. Linking verbs are often forms of the verb infinitive "to be," such as is, am, are, and were.
Linking verbs 🎈also are linked to the five senses, such as taste, smell, and feel. However, linking verbs are not action verbs.
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The predicate nominative 👌 is a type of subject complement that describes the subject as a new noun or noun phrase.
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A predicate adjective is an adjective that describes the subject of the sentence within the predicate. The subject is the person or thing that the sentence is about. It is often being described, performing an action, or receiving an action (in sentences using the passive voice).
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A direct object is the person or thing that directly receives the action or effect of the verb. It answers the question "what" or "whom."
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An indirect object answers the question "for what," "of what," "to what," "for whom," "of whom," or "to whom" and accompanies a direct object.
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Best Of Luck
Негізгі бет A Grammar Revision on Phrases Clauses Sentences Predicates Nominatives and Objects
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