Adjectively . clause is clause that serves as an adjective .
Such as have been we know , adjectival is the noun explained .
So , adjectively . clause also serves so , namely brief noun on .
Adjectively . clause used to give a description of , identity , and
other information to katabenda ( antecedent ) .
In structure adjectively . clause characterized by a relative pronoun ;
who , namely : whom , whose , which , when , where , why , and that .
*Who used to a person in a position of subject ( human as. than yourself )
.
*Used for whom a person in a position of an object ( human as. object ) .
*Which is used for object , either in the position of the subject or
object ( non-human as. than yourself ).
*That used as subtitusi who , whom , or which .
*Whose used to proprietorship .
*When used to time .
*Why used to cause .
Example:
Large hailstones were also reported during the storm, which is thought to have started in Wiltshire and moved to Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire.
One forecaster said it was almost certainly a tornado, thought to have been caused by a special kind of storm.
Brendan Jones, from Meteogroup, said: "At the moment it's difficult to say exactly where the tornado was because while the parent thunderstorm travelled all the way across the south Midlands, it wasn't necessarily producing a tornado all the time.
"There has been more than one report of a tornado beneath this storm. There has also been some quite big hailstones."
He said it was likely the storm was a "supercell" thunderstorm, when the air spins or rotates, which is not often seen in the UK.
Eyewitness Dave Ewart, from Kidlington, said: "I was at home when I noticed heavy dark clouds forming, then hail then - very suddenly - extremely high winds.
Questions and Answers of the excercises
Example:
Subordinators for adjective clauses are always relative pronouns.
Relative pronouns include the words: who, whom, that, known as clause modifiers.
The relative pronoun 'whom' substitutes for nouns and pronouns that relate to people; 'which' modifies nouns animals and things.
'When', 'whose' and 'where' are also relative pronouns. Use 'when' for time; 'where' for place; 'whose' for the possessive form of nouns and pronouns.
"She called me when I was in the middle of a conference."
"I finally remembered where I parked my car." ('where' substitutes for a place)
"I found a dog on the street yesterday whose owner I found out later." ('whose' substitutes for the possessive pronoun 'his' or 'her')
Article:
Tornado reported during storm in Oxfordshire
It was spotted in several places, including Bicester, Eynsham, Kidlington and South Leigh, on Monday afternoon.Large hailstones were also reported during the storm, which is thought to have started in Wiltshire and moved to Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire.
One forecaster said it was almost certainly a tornado, thought to have been caused by a special kind of storm.
Brendan Jones, from Meteogroup, said: "At the moment it's difficult to say exactly where the tornado was because while the parent thunderstorm travelled all the way across the south Midlands, it wasn't necessarily producing a tornado all the time.
"There has been more than one report of a tornado beneath this storm. There has also been some quite big hailstones."
He said it was likely the storm was a "supercell" thunderstorm, when the air spins or rotates, which is not often seen in the UK.
Eyewitness Dave Ewart, from Kidlington, said: "I was at home when I noticed heavy dark clouds forming, then hail then - very suddenly - extremely high winds.
Questions and Answers of the excercises
- + : I talked to the woman she was sitting next to me
-: I talked to the woman who was sitting next to me
- + : I have a class it begins at 08.00 Am
-: I have a class which begins at 08.00 Am
- + : The man called the police his car was stolen
-: The man whose car was stolen called the police
- + : The building is very old he lives there
-: The building where he lives is very old
- + : The woman was ms Silvy I saw her
-: The woman whom I saw was ms Silvy
Reference :
http://free-english-lesson.blogspot.com
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-17986143
http://web2.uvcs.uvic.ca/elc/studyzone/410/grammar/adj.htm