Subordinate sentence
31loose sentence — loose′ sen′tence n. gram. pro rht a sentence that does not end with the completion of its main clause, but continues with one or more subordinate clauses or other modifiers Compare periodic sentence • Etymology: 1890–95 …
32simple sentence — noun a sentence having no coordinate clauses or subordinate clauses • Hypernyms: ↑sentence …
33loose sentence — noun Date: circa 1890 a sentence in which the principal clause comes first and subordinate modifiers or trailing elements follow …
34periodic sentence — noun Date: circa 1928 a usually complex sentence that has no subordinate or trailing elements following its principal clause (as in “yesterday while I was walking down the street, I saw him”) …
35complex sentence — noun a sentence containing a subordinate clause or clauses …
36HEBREW GRAMMAR — The following entry is divided into two sections: an Introduction for the non specialist and (II) a detailed survey. [i] HEBREW GRAMMAR: AN INTRODUCTION There are four main phases in the history of the Hebrew language: the biblical or classical,… …
37Converb — In theoretical linguistics, a converb is a non finite verb form that serves to express adverbial subordination, i.e. notions like when , because , after , while . Converbs are differentiated from coverbs, which are verbs in complex predicates in… …
38Subordinative — Sub*or di*na*tive, a. Tending to subordinate; expressing subordination; used to introduce a subordinate sentence; as, a subordinative conjunction. [1913 Webster] …
39Arabela language — Arabela redirects here. For the television series, see Arabela (TV series). Arabela Tapweyokwaka Spoken in  Peru …
40clause — n. 1. Subordinate sentence, sentential term. 2. Article, provision, proviso, condition, stipulation …