Klausa kata sifat tidak mengubah arti dasar dari kalimat. Dalam beberapa kasus, ketika mereka memberikan informasi lebih lanjut ke dalam kalimat, mereka harus dengan tanda baca koma.
Berikut adalah beberapa contoh kalimat dengan klausa kata sifat digaris bawahi:
- Pizza,which most people love, is not very healthy.
- The people whose names are on the list will go to camp.
- Grandpa remembers the old days when there was no television.
- Fruit that is grown organicallyis expensive.
- Students who are intelligent get good grades.
- Eco-friendly cars that run on electricity save gas.
- I know someone whose father served in World War II.
- Making noise when he eats is the main reason why Sue does not like to eat with her brother.
- The kids who were called first will have the best chance of getting a seat.
- Running a marathon,a race of twenty-six miles, takes a lot of training.
- I enjoy telling people about Janet Evanovich whose latest book was fantastic.
- The people waiting all night outside the Apple store are trying to purchase a new iPhone.
- "He who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe is as good as dead." - Albert Einstein
- “Those who do not complain are never pitied.” - Jane Austen
- “People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid.” - Søren Kierkegaard
- “Never go to a doctor whose office plants have died.” - Erma Bombeck
Turning Adjective Clauses into Phrases
An adjective clause with a subject pronoun - such as which, that or who - can also be shortened into a phrase.
You can shorten an adjective clause in two ways:
- Omit the subject pronoun and verb.
- Omit the subject pronoun and change the verb to the form ending in "ing."
Here are some examples of how to create an adjective phrase:
- Adjective Clause: The books, which are lost, are not really necessary.
- Adjective Phrase: The books lost are not really necessary.
- Adjective Clause: The girl who is running is my best friend.
- Adjective Phrase: The girl running is my best friend.
- Adjective Clause: Something that smells bad may be rotten.
- Adjective Phrase: Something smelling bad may be rotten.
Remember, the goal of an adjective clause is to add more information to a noun or a pronoun. You can add the information by including a few more words or by changing the adjective clause to a phrase.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar