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Windyjolt Posted 16 years ago
Vocabulary

A sentence

Is this sentence noun clouse or relative clause?
The greatest rural densities are where the precipitation is adequate for agriculture, namely along the coast.
And also could you give me another example and some explain?
  

Top answer

w here the precipitation is adequate for agriculture is an adverbial clause, I'd say. It is one kind of relative clause. htm ]RELATIVE CLAUSES[/url]

  • w here the precipitation is adequate for agriculture is an adverbial clause, I'd say.
  • It is one kind of relative clause.
  • htm ]RELATIVE CLAUSES[/url]
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2 Answers
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where the precipitation is adequate for agriculture is an adverbial clause, I'd say. It is one kind of relative clause.

[url=http://esl.lbcc.cc.ca.us/eesllessons/nounclauses/nounclause.htm]NOUN CLAUSES[/url]
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windyjoltIs this sentence noun clouse or relative clause?
A sentence can't be a noun clause or a relative clause, but a sentence may contain, as a part of it, a noun clause or a relative clause. This sentence doesn't contain a good example of either of those types of clauses.

CJ

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