Microsoft Word - What Is A Complex Sentence
Microsoft Word - What Is A Complex Sentence
Microsoft Word - What Is A Complex Sentence
A complex sentence is a sentence that contains one independent and at least one
dependent clause (sometimes called a subordinate clause). An independent clause is a
phrase that is a complete sentence itself, whereas a dependent clause will not make a
complete sentence itself. When these two types of clauses appear in a sentence, we
create a complex sentence.
1. Adverbial Clauses
2. Relative Clauses
3. Noun Clauses
In the following sections, there is a brief explanation of how to construct each of these with
some examples.
However, they are complicated, so lessons explaining them in more detail will follow later on.
1) Adverbial Clauses
Adverbial clauses answer questions such as how? why? when? where?
They are made by connecting an independent clause and a dependent clause with
a subordinating conjunction.
Here are some common subordinating conjunctions that make complex sentences:
because while
although when
if even though
until as
Some experiments on animals give us the wrong result because animals’ bodies are not
exactly the same as our own.
SV subordinating conjunction SV
...because animals' bodies are not exactly the same as our own.
In adverbial clauses, however, it is possible to put the dependent clause before the
independent clause.
When you do this though, you MUST put a comma after the dependent clause (a comma is not
needed when the independent clause comes first):
Because animals’ bodies are not exactly the same as our own, some experiments on
animals give us the wrong result.
Here are some further examples. Notice how in some sentences the dependent clause comes
first, in others it is second. This is your choice:
2) Relative Clauses
Like adverbial clauses, relative clauses are made up of an independent clause and a dependent
clause.
However, these clauses have a different use. Relative clauses are used to modify a noun. In
other words, to give more information about it.
The relative pronouns who, which, that and where are used to do this, and the relative clause
is placed after the noun it is modifying.
For example:
Unlike adverbial clauses, the dependent clause (which is the relative clause) can break up the
independent clause - the dependent clause just needs to go after the noun, wherever that is.
Notice also that there are two Subject-Verb combinations. This will always be the case with
complex sentences as there are two clauses.
Here are some more examples. The dependent (relative) clause is in red, the independent
clause is in bold, and the noun being modified is underlined.
A noun clause answers the question 'who?' or 'what?'. Unlike relative clauses, which come
after the noun, noun clauses come after the verb.
For example:
The noun clauses are the dependent clauses because they do not make sense on their own.
They need the independent clause "I think...".
I think
Here are some more examples. The dependent (noun) clause is in red, and the independent
clause is in bold: