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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Adjective phrase

In the following sentence, "Michael is the employee (who/whom) the CEO asked to present to the board" does the phrase "Michael is the employee" serve as an adjectival phrase ? I am trying to breakdown why the CEO is the subject and not Michael.
  

Top answer

n the following sentence, "Michael is the employee (who/whom) the CEO asked to present to the board" does the phrase "Michael is the employee" serve as an adjectival phrase ? I am trying to breakdown why the CEO is the subject and not Michael. You have misunderstood.

  • n the following sentence, "Michael is the employee (who/whom) the CEO asked to present to the board" does the phrase "Michael is the employee" serve as an adjectival phrase ?
  • I am trying to breakdown why the CEO is the subject and not Michael.
  • You have misunderstood.
  • The main clause is Michael is the employee.
  • The rest of the sentence is a subordinate clause that describes 'employee'.
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1 Answers
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n the following sentence, "Michael is the employee (who/whom) the CEO asked to present to the board" does the phrase "Michael is the employee" serve as an adjectival phrase ? I am trying to breakdown why the CEO is the subject and not Michael.

You have misunderstood.
The main clause is Michael is the employee.

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