Noun clause questions, questions about noun clauses

Updated on educate 2024-03-12
5 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    1.The meaning of this sentence is that you can eat for free whenever you come to my restaurant, and the emphasis here is that you can eat whatever you like for free in my restaurant

    In this way, it can be seen that in fact, with food, you can't use whatever, because food has limited what you can eat. 2.Because this sentence does not lack an object, it cannot be used whatever, only an adverbial can be filled.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    First of all, analyze the sentence structure, the subject-verb-object is complete, you should think of adding an adverbial, and then combine it with the meaning of the sentence to get the answer a.

    Regarding noun clauses, remember to use them as a noun, an object-like use in a sentence, so as to analyze the sentence structure, and it should be OK.

    Hope it works for you.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    This question b is correct.

    This is the adverbial clause led by however, here however is relative to no matter how

    The book is quite interesting, I bought it no matter how much it cost".

    A If it's no matter, how much it may cost.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    If you travel to a place and the customs of this place are different from your country, you can add a to the place here, so use where.

    And in which words are quite in the place, which is obviously incompatible.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    she was so angry 【at all that he was doing 】 that she stayed up all night.

    1.First of all, don't look at the content in parentheses, just look at the outside, that is.

    she was so angry that she stayed up all night.

    It's SO....that...Too. That.

    She was so angry that she couldn't sleep all night. Stay up means to stay up late.

    2.Now look at the parentheses she was so angry at all that he was doing

    be angry at sth.Right. Feel angry, angry.

    She was furious at what he had done.

    all is the antecedent, followed by the definite clause led by that, and that acts as the object in the clause, the object of doing.

    was so angry at all that he was doing that she stayed up all night.

    It means that she was so angry at what he had done that she couldn't sleep all night.

Related questions
15 answers2024-03-12

Subject clause.

The subject clause is usually guided by the following words: >>>More

3 answers2024-03-12

The difference between a definite clause and a noun clause is as follows:First, the classification is different. >>>More

2 answers2024-03-12

Noun clause: A noun clause is a sentence that plays a noun role in a sentence. >>>More

4 answers2024-03-12

Noun clause conjunction:

1. Conjunctions: that, whether, if do not act as any component of the clause). >>>More

3 answers2024-03-12

Here is a detailed introduction to the noun clause, please read it yourself.