An adjective clause is also called a relative clause or an adjectival clause. A clause is a group of words that have a subject and predicate. There are two kinds of clauses: independent and dependent. Independent clauses are sentences because they express a complete thought. Examples are: “The dog ran away.” and “Get the door.” In the second one, the subject is implied. To explain the function of an adjective clause, we will look at dependent clauses.
Dependent
Clauses
Dependent clauses
have the subject and predicate but can not stand alone. They depend on another
clause to have meaning. Examples are: “When you finish your work” and
"unless I get more money.” With each of these, you want to ask “What?”
because the thought was not finished. Dependent clauses are also called
subordinate clauses and they start with a subordinate conjunction. This is the
word that links the dependent clause to the rest of the sentence.
Examples of subordinate
conjunctions are: how, where, when, why, unless, although, after, as far as, as
if, because, before, once, whether, while, now that, until, since, and unless.
The three types of
dependent clauses are:
· Adverbial
(or adverb) - Adverbial clauses function as an adverb and answer the questions:
when, where, why, how, and how much. Examples include: “Now that it rained a
lot, the grass turned green.” and “I am much olderthan my brother.”
· Nominal
- Nominal clauses function as a noun and can be the subject, an object, an
appositive, or a complement. Sometimes nominal clauses start with an
interrogative like: who, what, when, where, how, who, which, or why. Examples
of nominal clauses are: “They always fought overwho should pay the bill” and
“Whoever did thisis in big trouble.”
· Adjectival
(or adjective)
What
Is an Adjective Clause
Adjectives clauses have
a subject and a verb (or predicate). They will start with a relative pronoun,
like: that, who, whom, whose, or which, or a relative adverb, like why, where,
or when. Adjective clauses function as an adjective and modify nouns and pronouns.
They are also called relative clauses.
Just as the other
dependent clauses, the adjective clause does not express a complete
thought. It does not need commas separating it from the rest of the sentence if
it has essential information in it; that is if you need the information it
provides. If it gives additional information, then you use commas. A good way
to test for this is to leave out the clause, read the sentence, and see if the
meaning of the two sentences is different.
Here are some examples of
adjective clauses. The adjective clause is underlined.
· Chocolate, which
many of us adore, is fattening.
· People who
are smart follow the rules.
· I
can remember the time when there were no computers.
· Charlie
has a friend whose daughter lives in China.
· Wine that
is produced in Tuscany is not cheap.
Adjectives
Since adjective clauses
act like adjectives, you may want more information about adjectives.
Some adjectives express the writer’s opinion of a noun or pronoun,
like silly, lovely, awful, and outrageous. These are called opinion adjectives.
Some adjectives are
descriptive, telling about the physical characteristics of size, shape, color,
or age. Examples include: huge, wee, rectangular, oval, bluish, purple, new,
and ancient.
An origin adjective
tells where an object originated or where is came from. These are adjectives
like: eastern, lunar, Egyptian, or German.
The composition of a
noun or pronoun will be described by a material adjective. Examples are: woolen,
plastic, metal, or silk.
Some adjectives tell
what purpose an object is used for. These many times end with an “ing.” Some
examples include: baking, fishing, testing, or hunting.
Lastly, some adjectives
compare and have levels of comparison. These are words like: “good, better,
best”, “dry, drier, driest”, and “beautiful, more beautiful, and most
beautiful." Other adjectives compare but only on one level, like: unique,
main, impossible, final, and inevitable.
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