This video, which is intended for ESL students, describes the basics of using commas in adjective clauses (restrictive/essential and nonrestrictive/nonessential clauses).
This video is really really helpful for me. thanks for clearing my doubts. i am expecting more videos like adverb phrases and clauses,noun phrases and clauses etc.thanks a lot for sharing this useful video.
The lady, who wears yellow shoes, is my mother. Cited from Robyn on restrictive n non-restrictive relative clauses. In this sentence , the yellow shoes are extra information , unnecessary to identify who the mother is . There is only one woman . The Option without commas specifies the woman among many as the mother . Which lady? ...who wears the yellow shoes is my mother.
Yes. Essential. From General to specific . No comma. I know this info. The what- question ? asks for more info. My dog, Floyd , who loves pizza crusts , has developed pepperoni breath . We already know which dog, so this is extra information . Cited from Mr . Grammar Man. Not my original. TY! Good.
If someone says, "My brother, (pause...) who lives in Detroit, (pause...) is an engineer.", may, perhaps, be showing off. To them, it may be important for them to stress "lives in Detroit". To them, that sentence (the extra information) is necessary for you to know. ✍️ Language...🙄
My brother who lives in D. is an engineer. One of many. No more fog. This is superb info❣️
This video is really really helpful for me. thanks for clearing my doubts. i am expecting more videos like adverb phrases and clauses,noun phrases and clauses etc.thanks a lot for sharing this useful video.
Robyn is very concise n clear on this topic.
This is getting so clear by now. Thank you.
Thank you so much for this video. I'm making a lesson based on your video! It is perfect.
Hello Deborah
Whata neat and awesome explanation. Congratulations.
I am confused about this for long time. Thank you so much !!
give me your email i wanna ask you something
مستر عبد الرحيم احسن مدرس أنجليزي
Really helpful for me, thanks for this vedio
Very clear. Thanks this was outstanding.
When we know this adjective clause is essential or nonessential? Thank a lot.
Awesome information thank you
You helped me a lot. I did not know how to explain it!
Thank You for sharing wonderful lesson !
Could we use ( where and whose ) with commas ?
Please explain clearly !
Mathly Sakiny yeah sure in case if they are in a nonrestrictive sentence
Perfect video. It helped a lot.
You mentioned phi in some of the examples; did I spell phi correctly?
These is so helpful, thanks
This was pretty good!
Would you like to work on transformation of sentences?
It is very helpful. Thank you very much.
Excellent
The dog /that /which had gone missing is that of Lady G's.
Lady G's dog , NN, which was abducted , was later found in good condition .
I do get this. Only, Adam stated that we always need a comma with who n which.
Thank you! It's very helpful.
That was so helpful thank you so much
Thank you 💓
very nice
Yes. Makes perfect sense.
The fog affects most in these types of decisions .
Like and love from India
The woman- what woman? That 's what I learnt. When the whole clause is the correlative ( subject ) of the sentence, do we need a comma? Yes?
thank you very much.
Thanks.
الله يعطيك العافيه
Thanks😊
Thank you.
10 years late .. but thanks ! Taking my quiz in 30 lol!
Thank you😉
💗💗
that's so cool
THANKS!!
We were told to ask the What-question....for essential information. I got it. With the commas, it's extra information . There's only one brother, f.ex
thank you
The lady, who wears yellow shoes, is my mother. Cited from Robyn on restrictive n non-restrictive relative clauses. In this sentence , the yellow shoes are extra information , unnecessary to identify who the mother is . There is only one woman . The Option without commas specifies the woman among many as the mother . Which lady? ...who wears the yellow shoes is my mother.
Sorry , but in this case we don't use comma because the adjective clause is necessary to know which lady you are talking about
🙏
Yes. Essential. From General to specific . No comma. I know this info. The what- question ? asks for more info.
My dog, Floyd , who loves pizza crusts , has developed pepperoni breath . We already know which dog, so this is extra information . Cited from Mr . Grammar Man. Not my original. TY! Good.
If someone says, "My brother, (pause...) who lives in Detroit, (pause...) is an engineer.", may, perhaps, be showing off. To them, it may be important for them to stress "lives in Detroit". To them, that sentence (the extra information) is necessary for you to know. ✍️ Language...🙄
Thank you