Flow Chart: Adjective, Adverb, Noun Clauses
English
Hey guys, this couch waist just wanted to take a minute and go over this flowchart with you. I don't know how to find the adjective adverb or noun clauses in sentence. First thing you're gonna do is find a keyword like a relative pro now or a conjunctive adverb. Remember that's gonna be the start of most of your subordinate clauses. Another thing you can do is ensure I'm sorry, after you have found your calls, ensure that the claws notice I put that in quotations because I'm not certain you found the right laws. Where you can check that is to make sure that you've chosen a clause that has both a subject and a verb, right? From there, adjective and adverb split one direction announced a different direction. On this side over here, we just checked the clause and see how it's used in the sentence. That's our noun, guys. If you think that you're looking at a clause that is a noun, it's going to be used one of 5 ways in the sentence. It's going to be either a subject, a direct object, an indirect object, or a predicate nominate. Now, that's your noun clause. Back up here, we've just made sure that our calls has a subject and a verb, and we think it's modifying something. We think it's an adjective or an adverb. Check and see what the clause modifies. If it modifies a noun or a pronoun, then what you're looking at is an adjective. If it modifies a verb an adjective or an adverb, then what you're looking at, isn't that verb. There you go. I hope it works.