Grammatical name for and function “ who might be dead next week”
English
Please I need the grammatical name and function for "who might be dead next week"
grammatical-roles
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English
Please I need the grammatical name and function for "who might be dead next week"
grammatical-roles
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English
Please I need the grammatical name and function for "who might be dead next week"
grammatical-roles
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Magaret is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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English
Please I need the grammatical name and function for "who might be dead next week"
grammatical-roles
grammatical-roles
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asked yesterday
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'who might be dead next week' is a clause -- if it is independent then it is a question, as in "Who might be dead next week?", or "He asked me who might be dead next week." If it is dependent then it is a relative clause, as in "The man across the hall, who might be dead next week, was coughing all night."
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
votes
'who might be dead next week' is a clause -- if it is independent then it is a question, as in "Who might be dead next week?", or "He asked me who might be dead next week." If it is dependent then it is a relative clause, as in "The man across the hall, who might be dead next week, was coughing all night."
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'who might be dead next week' is a clause -- if it is independent then it is a question, as in "Who might be dead next week?", or "He asked me who might be dead next week." If it is dependent then it is a relative clause, as in "The man across the hall, who might be dead next week, was coughing all night."
add a comment |
'who might be dead next week' is a clause -- if it is independent then it is a question, as in "Who might be dead next week?", or "He asked me who might be dead next week." If it is dependent then it is a relative clause, as in "The man across the hall, who might be dead next week, was coughing all night."
'who might be dead next week' is a clause -- if it is independent then it is a question, as in "Who might be dead next week?", or "He asked me who might be dead next week." If it is dependent then it is a relative clause, as in "The man across the hall, who might be dead next week, was coughing all night."
answered 3 hours ago
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AmIAmI
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