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noun clause การใช้

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ประโยคมือถือ
  • A noun clause can be used like a noun.
  • But our just because is another grammatical animal entirely, a noun clause used as the subject of the sentence.
  • :Sorry for the late thought, but both sound correct to me . " What " introduces a noun clause.
  • A clause is a noun clause if a pronoun ( he, she, it, or they ) could be substituted for it.
  • What none of the authorities mention is that the because noun clause nearly always appears in the same form : Just because x doesn't mean y.
  • While the noun clause introducer se is permissible in constructions similar to the second example in 18b, se is not allowed in sentences such as the one in 18a.
  • In several languages ( English, Spanish, and Latin, for example ), the word that introduces a noun clause can " jump around " in the clause and fulfill a variety of functions.
  • English has a grammatical construct where a preposition can appear after its object when the object is a noun clause-- " I want someone to go to the movies with tonight ".
  • It is also possible in indirect questions for a relative clause or a headless relative clause including a question word to be substituted for a noun clause, if an oblique hearer-object is present:
  • Sentences such as the ones below in numbers 22, 23, and 24 can be said to motivate the assignment of the noun clauses in 25 and 26 to the class of noun clause objects:
  • Broadly, the most commonly utilised structure for both direct and indirect reporting of questions are made up of a verb of interrogation such as " aks "  ask accompanied by a noun clause object.
  • The structures used for direct and indirect speech are very similar, both are composed minimally of a verb of reporting such as " tok "  talk or " tel "  tell followed by a noun clause.
  • The two glosses in example 29, point to the fact that two interpretations are often possible for this type of sentence, depending on whether the noun clause is taken to be occupying the object position as in the first gloss or the adjacent adverbial position in the second gloss.
  • In most instances, the same verbs of speaking are used in the superordinate clause, although as Faraclas ( 1996 : 32 ) reports, other verbs such as " wont "  want are possible here as well but the noun clause objects of these verbs must embody an imperative subjunctive clause:
  • :: : There's nothing wrong with " like what we did " . " What we did " is a noun clause, as you can see in constructions like " What we did was to solve the problem " where it is the subject of the verb . " Like " is a preposition, so a noun clause can be its object.
  • :: : There's nothing wrong with " like what we did " . " What we did " is a noun clause, as you can see in constructions like " What we did was to solve the problem " where it is the subject of the verb . " Like " is a preposition, so a noun clause can be its object.