Difference between revisions of "Clause (definition)"
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+ | 'Clause' can be defined as a group of words containing at least one subject and one verb. One clause can simply be a sentence or one or more clauses are combined to form a sentence. For example, ''I went to school.'' is a clause: ''I'' is a subject and ''went'' is a verb. The clause is a sentence as well. In a sentence such as ''I know that he went to school.'' there are two clauses: one is ''I know that he went to school'' and the other is ''that he went to school''. The former and the latter have ''I''/''know'' and ''he''/''went'' as their subject/verb, respectively. The former clause (i.e.,''I know that he went to school'') is called a main clause; on the contrary, the latter (i.e., ''that he went to school'') is called an [[Embedded Clause (definition)|embedded clause]]. | ||
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+ | ==See Also== | ||
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+ | ==External Links== | ||
+ | *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clause | ||
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+ | ==References== | ||
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[[Category:Technical Definitions]] | [[Category:Technical Definitions]] | ||
[[Category:Syntax]] | [[Category:Syntax]] | ||
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Revision as of 12:41, 8 July 2009
'Clause' can be defined as a group of words containing at least one subject and one verb. One clause can simply be a sentence or one or more clauses are combined to form a sentence. For example, I went to school. is a clause: I is a subject and went is a verb. The clause is a sentence as well. In a sentence such as I know that he went to school. there are two clauses: one is I know that he went to school and the other is that he went to school. The former and the latter have I/know and he/went as their subject/verb, respectively. The former clause (i.e.,I know that he went to school) is called a main clause; on the contrary, the latter (i.e., that he went to school) is called an embedded clause.
See Also
External Links