| 30 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
Mrs. Carnack has a cousin whom she would like us to meet.
|
| 31 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
Who was the person who won the track meet?
|
| 32 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
The restaurant where there was music was almost deserted.
|
| 33 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
Find a boy whose eyes are green.
|
| 34 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
The tale that was told that night was never forgotten.
|
| 35 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
There is nothing that will satisfy his curiosity.
|
| 36 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses
begin with that, which, where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word
followed by a space and the last word of the adjective clause in the
following sentence:
The song that came from the wren was like a tinkling bell.
| 29 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
The fox that jumped the fence was large.
|
| 30 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
The stranger picked the nearest house, which had a green door.
|
| 31 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
Which of the girls who laughed at the clown knows his name?
|
| 32 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
I don't know who built the castle where a dragon now lives.
|
| 33 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
The woman whom we choose should be a strong leader.
|
| 34 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
An eagle, whose feather this is, lives nearby.
|
| 35 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
Paul Prokopf owns a cat that never sleeps.
|
| 36 |
Answer: [removed]
That is the house "where I grew up."
The words in quotes make up an adjective clause. An adjective clause does
what an adjective does: it modifies a noun or pronoun. The clause above
modifies the noun "house." Adjective clauses often begin with that, which,
where, who, whom, or whose. Type the first word, followed by a space, and
the last word of the adjective clause in the following sentence:
Where is the general who will lead them to victory?
|
|
0 comments