Kamis, 03 Mei 2012


Pengertian Noun Clause

A noun clause is an entire clause which takes the place of a noun in another clause or phrase.

Examples and Observations:

  • "When Mrs. Frederick C. Little's second son arrived, everybody noticed that he was not much bigger than a mouse."
    (E.B. White, Stuart Little, 1945)

  • "I know that there are things that never have been funny, and never will be. And I know that ridicule may be a shield, but it is not a weapon."
    (Dorothy Parker)

  • "I believe that there is a subtle magnetism in Nature, which, if we unconsciously yield to it, will direct us aright."
    (Henry David Thoreau)

  • "Whoever was the person behind Stonehenge was one dickens of a motivator, I'll tell you that."
    (Bill Bryson, Notes From a Small Island. Doubleday, 1995)

  • "How we remember, what we remember, and why we remember form the most personal map of our individuality."
    (Christina Baldwin)

  • "This is the story of what a Woman's patience can endure, and of what a Man's resolution can achieve."
    (Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White, 1859)

  • "That dogs, low-comedy confederates of small children and ragged bachelors, should have turned into an emblem of having made it to the middle class--like the hibachi, like golf clubs and a second car--seems at the very least incongruous."
    (Edward Hoagland, "Dogs, and the Tug of Life")

  • "All sentences, then, are clauses, but not all clauses are sentences. In the following sentences, for example, the direct object slot contains a clause rather than a noun phrase. These are examples of nominal clauses (sometimes called 'noun clauses'):
    • I know that the students studied their assignment.
    • I wonder what is making Tracy so unhappy.
These nominal clauses are examples of dependent clauses--in contrast to independent clauses, those clauses that function as complete sentences."
(Martha Kolln and Robert Funk, Understanding English Grammar, 5th ed., Allyn and Bacon, 1998)
  • "I have run,
    I have crawled,
    I have scaled these city walls,
    These city walls
    Only to be with you,
    Only to be with you.
    But I still haven't found what I'm looking for."
    (written and performed by U2, "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For," The Joshua Tree, 1987)
http://grammar.about.com

Definition:

A Noun-Clause is a group of words which contains a Subject and a Predicate of its own and does the work of a noun.

Examples:

• I often wonder how you are getting on with him.

• He feared that he would fail.

• They replied that they would come to this town.

• Do you know who stole the watch?

• I thought that it would be fine day.

• No one knows who he is.

• I did not know what he would do next.

How the
budget got in is a mystery.

• Pay careful attention to what I am going to say.

• I do not understand how all it happened.

The Noun-Clauses can be replaced with
suitable Nouns or with suitable Noun-Phrases.

• No one knows when he will come. (Noun-Clauses)
• No one knows the time of his coming. (Noun-Phrases)

• I heard that he had succeeded. (Noun-Clauses)
• I heard of his success. (Noun-Phrases)

• We will
never know why he failed. (Noun-Clauses)
• We
will never know the reason for his failure. (Noun-Phrases)

• The
law will punish whosoever is guilty. (Noun-Clause)
The law will punish the guilty. (Noun)

• The police want to know where he is living. (Noun-Clauses)
• The police want to know his residence. (Noun)
http://www.english-for-students.com/Noun-Clause

Noun Clause Exercise

Find out the noun clauses in the following sentences and state what purpose they serve.
1.    The king ordered that the traitor should be put to death.
2.    He said that he would not go.
3.    That he is not interested in the offer is known to us.
4.    He said that he was not feeling well.
5.    I cannot rely on what he says.
6.    I don’t know where he has gone.
7.    He asked whether the servant had polished his shoes.
8.    The news that he is alive has been confirmed.
9.    The belief that the soul is immortal is almost universal.
10.    It is certain that we will have to admit defeat.
11.    It was fortunate that he was present.
12.    The report that only ten persons were killed in the riots is not true.
Answers
1.    Here the noun clause ‘that the traitor should be put to death’ is that object of the verb     ordered.
2.    Here the noun clause ‘that he would not go’ is the object of the verb said.
3.    Here the noun clause ‘that he is not interested in the offer’ is the subject of the verb is.
4.    Here the noun clause ‘that he was not feeling well’ is the object of the verb said.
5.    Here the noun clause ‘what he says’ is the object of the preposition on.
6.    Here the noun clause ‘where he has gone’ is the object of the verb know.
7.    Here the noun clause ‘whether the servant had polished his shoes’ is the object of the verb asked.
8.    Here the noun clause ‘that he is alive’ is in apposition to the noun news.
9.    Here the noun clause ‘that the soul is immortal’ is in apposition to the noun belief.
10.    Here the noun clause ‘that we will have to admit defeat’ is in apposition to the pronoun it.
11.    Here the noun clause ‘that he was present’ is in apposition to the pronoun it.
12.    Here the noun clause ‘that only ten persons were killed in the riots’ is in apposition to the noun report.
http://www.englishpractice.com

Conjunctions

Definition

      Some words are satisfied spending an evening at home, alone, eating ice-cream right out of the box, watching Seinfeld re-runs on TV, or reading a good book. Others aren't happy unless they're out on the town, mixing it up with other words; they're joiners and they just can't help themselves. A conjunction is a joiner, a word that connects (conjoins) parts of a sentence.
Here are some example conjunctions:

Coordinating Conjunctions
Subordinating Conjunctions
and, but, or, nor, for, yet, so
although, because, since, unless
We can consider conjunctions from three aspects.

Form

Conjunctions have three basic forms:
  • Single Word
    for example: and, but, because, although
  • Compound (often ending with as or that)
    for example: provided that, as long as, in order that
  • Correlative (surrounding an adverb or adjective)
    for example: so...that

Function

Conjunctions have two basic functions or "jobs":
  • Coordinating conjunctions are used to join two parts of a sentence that are grammatically equal. The two parts may be single words or clauses, for example:
    - Jack and Jill went up the hill.
    - The water was warm, but I didn't go swimming.
  • Subordinating conjunctions are used to join a subordinate dependent clause to a main clause, for example:
    - I went swimming although it was cold.

 

Position

  • Coordinating conjunctions always come between the words or clauses that they join.
  • Subordinating conjunctions usually come at the beginning of the subordinate clause.
In this lesson we will look in more detail at:

Subordinating Conjunctions

A Subordinating Conjunction (sometimes called a dependent word or subordinator) comes at the beginning of a Subordinate (or Dependent) Clause and establishes the relationship between the dependent clause and the rest of the sentence. It also turns the clause into something that depends on the rest of the sentence for its meaning.
  • He took to the stage as though he had been preparing for this moment all his life.
  • Because he loved acting, he refused to give up his dream of being in the movies.
  • Unless we act now, all is lost.
Notice that some of the subordinating conjunctions in the table below — after, before, since — are also prepositions, but as subordinators they are being used to introduce a clause and to subordinate the following clause to the independent element in the sentence.

Common Subordinating Conjunctions

after
although
as
as if
as long as
as though
because
before
even if
even though
if
if only
in order that
now that
once
rather than
since
so that
than
that
though
till
unless
until
when
whenever
where
whereas
wherever
while

EXERCISE - CONJUNCTIONS
Fill in the blanks with these words: although, and, because, but, or, since, so, unless, until, when.
  • 1. Things were different _____ I was young.
  • 2.  I do it _____ I like it.
  • 3. Let us wait here _____ the rain stops.
  • 4. You cannot be a lawyer  _____ you have a law degree.
  • 5. That was years _____ years ago.
  • 6. She has not called _____ she left last week.
  • 7. I saw him leaving an hour _____ two ago.
  • 8. This is an expensive _____ very useful book.
  • 9. We were getting tired _____ we stopped for a rest.
  • 10. He was angry _____ he heard when happened.
Answer:
1.      When
2.      Because
3.      Until
4.      Unless
5.      And
6.      Since
7.      Or
8.      But
9.      So
10.  When