G6: Reducing Adjective Clauses - Spring
www.spring.edu › webroom › practice_g6_adj_16. adjective phrase: Mary, [who is happy with her decision to attend UCD], is doing very well there. REDUCED: Mary, happy with her decision to attend UCD, is... 7. prepositional phrase: The runner [who is in the lead at the Denver Marathon] won an Olympic gold medal last year. REDUCED: The runner in the lead at the Denver Marathon won...
NV - Gram 2 - Reduced Adjective Clauses | PDF
www.scribd.com › document › 563744045Reduce adjective clauses to phrases. 1. The man who is standing there is a clown. 2. The envelop which lies on the table has no stamp on it. 3. Benzene, which was discovered by Faraday, became the starting point in the manufacture of many dyes, perfumes and explosives. 4. My grandmother, who is old and sick, never goes out of the house. 5.
Reduced Adjective Clauses DLA - Mt. San Antonio College
www.mtsac.edu › writingcenter › dlasbecause they have no meaning without an independent (main) clause. Reduced Adjective Clauses We reduce sentences when you have the same subject in the main clause and the adjective clause. Adjective clauses contain relative pronouns like who, which, or that. The reduced adjective clause becomes an adjective phrase, which does not have a subject. An adjective phrase does not have a