clauses. a clause, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in...

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Clauses

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Page 1: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Clauses

Page 2: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb.

1. I am here. (Yo) estoy aquí. 2. When you finish… Cuando (tú)

termines… 3. He loves his wife. (El) quiere a su

esposa. 4. …that you read. …que (tú) lees.

Page 3: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Numbers 1 & 3 are independent clauses. They can stand alone. They are sentences all by themselves.

Numbers 2 & 4 are dependent (subordinate) clauses. They can’t stand alone. The subordinators (when & that) link them to another clause, & they are subordinate to that clause.

Page 4: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

PHRASES are written below. They don’t have a subject/verb combination:

in the roomwalking to the store

written in Englishto be honest

These are PHRASES. The difference between clauses & phrases is that clauses have a subject & verb and phrases don’t.

Page 6: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Clauses & phrases HAVE to function as some part of speech. They can function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs.

Noun

I know the truth. – I know that he is here.Truth & that he is here are direct objects.

Your brain could fit in a thimble. -- What you understand could fit in a thimble.

Your brain & What you understand are subjects.

I’ll give it to you. – I’ll give it to whoever wants it. You & whoever wants it are objects of the preposition (to).

Page 7: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Adjective

The tall boy is my son. – The boy who lives here is my son.Both tall & who lives here tell you which boy.

I know the pretty girl. – I know the girl who is eating.Both pretty & who is eating tell you which girl.

I visited my sick mother. – I visited my mother, who is sick.Both sick & who is sick describe “mother.”

Page 8: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Adverb

Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, & other adverbs & USUALLY answer one of the following questions: when, why, where, how, how much, under what circumstances.

He left yesterday. – He left when she called. Both yesterday & when she called answer the question

when.

He left because he was tired. Because he was tired answers the question why.

Page 9: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Most noun & adjective clauses start with that, who, whom, or which. Virtually every other subordinating conjunction (the word that connects the dependent clause to the independent clause) introduces an adverb clause: if, because, before, after, although, when, where, until, unless, etc.

Page 10: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

NOTE

Subordinating conjunctions (that, when, after, although, if, etc., as mentioned on previous slides) are one type of conjunction. The other type is coordinating conjunctions. They link 2 INdependent clauses. It’s like 2 sentences joined together, not a sentence that has another clause dependent on it:

Juan left early, and the teacher lowered his grade.

There are only 7 of these, so they’re easy to memorize:and but or nor for so yet

Page 11: Clauses. A CLAUSE, in any language, has a subject (sometimes indicated just by the verb ending in Spanish) and a verb. 1. I am here.(Yo) estoy aquí. 2

Knowing what type of clause you have is essential in understanding how to use the subjunctive in Spanish.

It’s also pretty important if you’re going to be teaching English.