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You must put the book where you found it
It is indeed an adverbial clause.
But what is not guided by that is not necessarily an adverbial clause, such as:
you must put the book to the place where you found it.
This is a definite clause where = from which
And if the definite clause is followed by a complete sentence, and it is led by that, it must be a copositional clause. ”
Basically correct. Depending on your understanding of the complete sentence that follows, sometimes that can be the subject of a clause, and it is also a definite clause, for example:
this is the precious diamond that will be exhibited tommorrow.
This is the precious diamond that will be on display tomorrow. that leads the definite clause and acts as the subject in the clause.
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No. that leads to an emphatic sentence (it is a dog that...)Noun clause (i told you that...)
The dog that....and copositional clauses.
Among them, that does not make components in the emphatic sentence and the copositional clause; In the noun clause, the definite clause is used as a component.
There are many words that can guide an adverbial clause, and a clause that is not that is not necessarily an adverbial clause is not necessarily an adverbial clause, for example: can you tell me who ate the cake?), definite clauses (there are 3 eggs on the table, which are good) and many more.
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1. A definite clause, a simple sentence is modified and qualified after a word or pronoun, which is called a definite clause. Generally speaking, a clause is a definite clause in the whole sentence, and this clause is called a definite clause. Acts as a definite component in the main clause.
The modified word is called the antecedent. The definite clause is different from the case of the word as a definite, it can usually only be placed after the modified word, i.e. the antecedent;
2. Antecedents are nouns and pronouns modified by definite clauses. Acts as a certain part in the definite clause. The reason why it is called a predicate clause is because the predicative clause that modifies it is always placed after it, and the antecedent always appears before the definite clause, unlike when the ordinary adjective modifies the noun, the adjective is placed before the noun.
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Not all!
Such as: keep up with the situation:
is he the man who/that wants to see you?
Is he the one who wants to see you?
Not keeping up with the situation:
there is somebody here who wants to talk to you.
There's someone here to talk to you.
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Not necessarily separated by a few phrases at times.
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Not necessarily separated by a few phrases at times.
Yes, here, the first sentence is fixed, and the second sentence is not.
Other cases are analyzed separately.
that whom who
things which that
No, a complete sentence should be both subject-verb-object.
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