Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Sometimes in English a noun clause is used without the introductory word.
Who waits modifies him and is not the tail end of a "noun clause."
A noun clause can be used like a noun.
Relative pronouns and interrogative words can also introduce noun clauses:
A subordinating conjunction can also introduce a noun clause:
Noun clauses function the same way that nouns and noun phrases do in a sentence.
Some of the English words that introduce noun clauses are that, whether, who, why, whom, what, how, when, whoever, where, and whomever.
(The noun clause that he likes me serves as the object of the main-clause verb know.)
A clause is a noun clause if a pronoun (he, she, it, or they) could be substituted for it.
In the imperfect aspect, -kwe also is used to indicate possession (see noun clauses).
Two subordinating conjunctions commonly introduce noun clauses:
Or as Fowler would (perhaps) say, Arthur found a noun clause instead of a good solid common noun he could mortgage or marry.
There are also different types of dependent clauses, including noun clauses, relative (adjectival) clauses, and adverbial clauses.
The difference between a noun phrase and a noun clause is that a noun clause has a verb in it.
"A Basic Description and Analytic Treatment of Noun Clauses in Nigerian Pidgin."
The infinitive mood is used in dependent noun clauses, in which the subject is expressed in accusative and the verb at the infinitive mood.
These are: prepositional phrase, participial phrase, gerund phrase, infinitive phrase, adverb clause, adjective clause, and noun clause.
A large proportion of his dependent clauses are in fact noun clauses which complement verbs (49, 53); such clauses are entirely absent from the Conrad and Lawrence passages.
In grammar, a dependent statement is a statement converted into a noun clause, normally, in English, by the addition of that at the beginning, and made dependent on another clause (e.g. as subject or object).
When a noun clause marker like "dass" or "wer" (in English, "that" or "who" respectively) is used, the verb appears at the end of the sentence for the word order SOV.
(The noun clause why you need experience functions as the direct object of the main-clause verb "understands", and within the noun clause why serves as an adverb modifying need.)
Another pro-Jagger-usage reader, Andrew Charig of Port Murray, N.J., agreed: "The object of the preposition to is the noun clause he who waits - with he being the subject of the clause, and correctly in the nominative case."
Noun clauses in Spanish are typically introduced by the complementizer que, and such a noun clause may serve as the object of the preposition de, resulting in the sequence de que in the standard language.
The infinitive is used, as in English, to make subordinate noun clauses that express an action at an indefinite time, and possibly with an indefinite or implicit subject, e.g. queremos cantar ("we would like to sing"), cantar é agradável (lit.