Grammar & Punctuation – Clause components – Adverbial.
There remains one clause component that is much less straightforward: adverbials. These are words or phrases that answer question such as: ï‚§ Where? Here down the road ï‚§ When? Later…
There remains one clause component that is much less straightforward: adverbials. These are words or phrases that answer question such as: ï‚§ Where? Here down the road ï‚§ When? Later…
Subject+verb+object+complement. It is also possible to have part of a clause that completes the object: SUBJECT VERB OBJECT COMPLEMENT The company made Peter Smithson Managing Director. This made his wife…
Subject+verb+object. If there is an object, it normally follows the verb. It refers to a different person or thing from the subject. Frequently that person or thing is affected by…
Subject+verb+complement. A small number of verbs are followed not by an object, but by a complement. The commonest of these verbs is be. For example: SUBJECT VERB COMPLEMENT I am…
Clauses can contain five different components: Subject. Verb. Object. Complement. Adverbial. Subject+verb. The simplest pattern for a clause is a subject followed by a verb. The subject tells us what…
We can use sentences for four main purposes in communication: ï‚§ To make a statement: That car is travelling very fast. ï‚§ To ask a question: Is that car breaking…
So far we have looked at four grammatical levels: sentence, clause, phrase, word. There is just one more we need to be aware of. Some words can change their form…
So far we have looked at how phrases and words build up into sentences. But there is one further level of grammar you have to understand before you can really…