Asked by Angelica

The sentence is 'What we forgot to mention was that we will be moving in the spring.' I found a clause, it's a noun clause. It's 'that we will be moving in the spring.' I think it's being used as a direct object. We is the subject. Forgot is the verb. What gets the action of the action verb, who or what got forgotten? The clause can't be the subject because it's we. It's not a predicate nominative because there's no linking verb and subject being renamed. It's not an object of a preposition. Any help would be very appreciated. Noun clauses confuse me.

Answers

Answered by Writeacher
You're correct that the "that..." clause is a noun clause. The trick is to figure out what's going on in the rest of the sentence.

But there's a second noun clause there. Do you see it?

"was" is the main verb. What kind of verb is it?
Answered by Angelica
Was is a linking verb, so let me think, would the clause that we will be moving in the spring be a predicate nominative because it is identifying or renaming the subject of the sentence? Is what the subject? Thank you for helping me. I'm more lost than I thought!
Answered by Writeacher
This sentence has two noun clauses, and yes, the "that..." clause is the predicate nominative.

"What we forgot to mention" is the noun clause that is serving as the subject of the main verb "was" -- do you see the structure of all this now? It's tricky!
Answered by Angelica
You rock! Thank you! I just got it. For what you do, thank you. I can't tell you how much you help.
Answered by Writeacher
Very good!

You're very welcome!
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