Clause - page 2

Substantive clause meaning
A clause used as a noun is called a substantive clause. A substantive clause may be used as the subject or object of a verb, as an appositive, or as a...
Fear clause latin
A fear clause always follows an independent clause that contains a verb of fearing (timeō, vereor, metuō, terreor) and is introduced by ne (NB: when a...
Gerund dependent clause
Is a gerund a dependent clause?What is an example of a Dependant clause?What are the 3 types of dependent clauses?What clause starts with a gerund?Ca...
Purpose clause latin
What is a purpose clause in Latin?How is a purpose clause formed Latin?What is a purpose clause?What is the difference between a result and purpose c...
Relative purpose clause latin
In a relative clause of purpose, the ut or ne is replaced by a relative pronoun (i.e. quī, quae, quod) or relative adverb (i.e. ubi, unde). We can dif...
Uses of ut latin
How is UT used in Latin?What can UT mean Latin?What is Latin UT result clause?What does UT with indicative mean?Is UT a suffix?What kind of clause is...
Non obstante clause
A non-obstante clause is added to a provision in order to uphold its enforceability over another provision that is contradictory to it. This clause is...
Latin purpose clause
What is a Latin clause of purpose?What is a purpose clause example?How is a purpose clause formed Latin?What is the difference between a result and p...
Intermediate clause dickinson
What is a relative clause of purpose Dickinson?What is the Latin Ubi clause?What are all the types of clauses in Latin?What is a relative clause of p...