Asked by C.W
Drag each item to indicate whether it is an independent clause or a dependent clause.(2 points)
Independent Clause Dependent Clause
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
I don't see the clause items to sort. Could you paste the list of clauses you need to classify?
While you paste them, here are quick tips you can use to decide:
- Independent clause: expresses a complete thought, can stand alone as a sentence (has subject + verb). Example: "She finished her homework."
- Dependent clause: cannot stand alone and often begins with a subordinating word (because, although, if, when, while, since, that, which, who, etc.). Example: "Because she finished her homework" (needs more to be a full sentence).
Send the clauses and I'll sort each one into Independent or Dependent for you.
While you paste them, here are quick tips you can use to decide:
- Independent clause: expresses a complete thought, can stand alone as a sentence (has subject + verb). Example: "She finished her homework."
- Dependent clause: cannot stand alone and often begins with a subordinating word (because, although, if, when, while, since, that, which, who, etc.). Example: "Because she finished her homework" (needs more to be a full sentence).
Send the clauses and I'll sort each one into Independent or Dependent for you.
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