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Theory or Definition of Adverbial Clauses
An adverbial clause is a clause that functions as an adverb. In other words, it contains subject (explicit or implied) and predicate, and it modifies a verb.
According to Sidney Greenbaum and Randolph Quirk, adverbial clauses function mainly as adjuncts or disjuncts. In those functions they are like adverbial phrases, but in their potentiality for greater explicitness, they are more often like prepositional phrases (Greenbaum and Quirk,1990):
Article of Adverbial Clauses
The Forms and Functions of Clauses in English
Adverb Clauses
The following article explains the forms and functions of clauses in English grammar that students must learn.
Adverb Clauses
Adverb clauses are defined as subordinate clauses formed by a subordinating conjunction followed by a clause. Some of the more common subordinating conjunctions in English that introduce adverb clauses include:- after
- although
- because
- before
- even though
- if
- once
- since
- so that
- though
- unless
- until
- when
- whereas
- while
- After she gave the baby a bath, she decided to take a nap.
- The girl cannot usually eat beef stew because she is allergic to carrots.
- The couple has been saving money so that they can go on a vacation.
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Sources
Hopper, Paul J. A Short Course in Grammar. W.W. Norton & Company: New York, 1999.
Huddleston, Rodney. Introduction to the Grammar of English. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1984.
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