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How to judge whether a sentence is a noun clause?

The foreign language group Xiao Qiqi answers your questions.

Nominal clauses, as the name implies, are sentences with nominal part-of-speech functions. This sentence can be regarded as a whole, and its function is equivalent to a noun, which acts as subject, object, slogan and the same language in complex sentences. Nominal clauses include subject clauses, predicative clauses, object clauses and appositive clauses.

Subject clause The clause that acts as the subject in a compound sentence is usually placed before the predicate verb in the main sentence.

The object clause is placed in the main sentence after the predicate verb (constituting the verb-object), preposition (constituting the object-object) and adjective (adjective object, common adjectives followed by objects: sure, care).

Predicative clauses are placed after conjunctions, such as is, am, are, look, remain and seem.

The appositive clause is easily confused with the attributive clause. The appositive clause is mainly used to further explain the preceding nouns, while the attributive clause is used to modify nouns. Pay attention to this when using.

Common nouns are followed by appositive clauses: facts, information, hints, suggestions, beliefs, thoughts and doubts.

It is wrong to talk about antecedents from different viewpoints, because antecedents only appear in attributive clauses, how can they appear in nominal clauses? . . . .

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