Question #7012e
1 Answer
Jan 7, 2018
An adjective clause is a clause that is used as an adjective in the sentence.
Explanation:
The adjective clauses modify a subject using a clause (subject and verb). Adjective clauses come after the subject it is describing. They usually start with pronouns called relative pronouns, which are who, whom, whose, which, or that. Or they can start with relative adverbs, when where, or why.
Ex: The yogurt that you have bought is expired.
Now you try one! Find the Adjective Clause.
Ex: The homework which you have done is graded.
Answer: which you have done.
Hope this helped you!
P.S. The site I used to get this information was http://www.grammar-monster.com/glossary/adjective_clauses.htm
Even I didn't know it!