- Adverbial clause
An adverbial clause is a
clause that functions as anadverb . In other words, it contains subject (explicit or implied) and predicate, and it modifies averb .*"I saw Joe when I went to the store." (explicit subject "I")
*"He sat quietly in order to appear polite." (implied subject "he")According to Sidney Greenbaum and Randolph Quirk, adverbial clauses function mainly as
adjunct s ordisjunct s. In those functions they are likeadverbial phrase s, but in their potentiality for greater explicitness, they are more often like prepositional phrases ("Greenbaum" and "Quirk",1990):*"We left after the speeches ended."
*"We left after the end of the speeches."Contrast adverbial clauses with
adverbial phrase s, which do not contain aclause .*"I like to fly kites for fun."
Kinds of adverbial clauses
(Sinclair, 1990)
References
* Greenbaum, Sidney & Quirk, Randolph. "A Student's Grammar of the English Language". Hong Kong: Longman Group (FE) Ltd, 1990.
* Sinclair, John (editor-in-chief). "Collins Cobuild English Grammar". London and Glasgow: William Collins Sons & Co ltd, 1990.ee also
*
phrase structure rules
*transformational-generative grammar
*structural linguistics
*semantics
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