Which would be the best way to combine the following sentences using an adjective clause? Emily's necklace was given to her by her mother. It's made of gold and emerald. A. Emily's necklace, which is made of gold and emerald, was given to her by her mother. B. Emily's necklace was given to her by her mother which is made of gold and emerald. C. Emily's necklace which is made of gold and emerald was given to her by her mother.
@Hyperbolex
Adjective clause is a?
B??
An adjective clause is a subordinate clause used to modify a noun or a pronoun in the main clause. It may be introduced by the pronouns who, whose, whom, which, or that (and sometimes when or where). These pronouns are called relative pronouns because they relate to a noun or a pronoun in the sentence.
Explain.
An adjective clause—also called an adjectival or relative clause—will meet three requirements: First, it will contain a subject and verb. Next, it will begin with a relative pronoun [who, whom, whose, that, or which] or a relative adverb [when, where, or why]. Finally, it will function as an adjective, answering the questions What kind? How many? or Which one?
The adjective clause will follow one of these two patterns: Relative Pronoun or Adverb + Subject + Verb Relative Pronoun as Subject + Verb
i still don't get the right answer?
Well which one do you think it is?
An adjective clause is a subordinate clause used to modify a noun or a pronoun in the main clause. It may be introduced by the pronouns who, whose, whom, which, or that (and sometimes when or where). These pronouns are called relative pronouns because they relate to a noun or a pronoun in the sentence.
Source: www.sinclair.edu
B?
No, you're on the right track though.
^
I think A is the correct answer. It sounds correct, and i've had this question before. K12?
Stop giving direct answers!
Sorry, I'm new here. Is that a thing i should watch out for?
Don't give people direct answers. Guide them through their questions, I just got an issue warning for doing that, so I'd watch out if I were you! :D
Yes Ma'am! And welcome to open study! Please take a look at the code of conduct so you know all rules. :) http://openstudy.com/code-of-conduct
And @Made-up_Maisiegh told me to stop that. :)
OMG! Thanks for the advice! @Made-up_Maisiegh @Hyperbolex
Lol @Hyperbolex And No problem @abi_carter :-)
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