quiz6Corrected

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University of Houston, Downtown *

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3318

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Philosophy

Date

Jan 9, 2024

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pdf

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2

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The pronoun "Whose" is used to replace "who's" or "Who is" O False Whose replaces possessive pronouns like The dog's bowl --> whose bowl (145) ‘We combine clauses for efficiency. ° True “Who" and "Whom" differ in how they are used: "who" is used when the pronoun is the subject of the phrase. ° True They are parallel to | and Me. (142) Moving a relative clause to the front of the sentence makes that relative clause the subject of the sentence. O False The relative clause will always retain the relationship it had before movement (147). Embedded adjective clauses are separated from the MATRIX Clause with commas, as in: "The lawnmower, which is broken, is in the garage." O False The embedded adjective clause joins the noun phrase as a single constituent; it cannot be separated by punctuation. The above example is NOT restrictive relative clause; it is a nonrestrictive relative clause. (137 & 138) The following sentence: "Elephants are complex social animals that feel compassion." is made up of (a) Elephants are complex social animals. (b) Complex social animals feel compassion. O False (A) ELEPHANTS feel compassion. (b) ELEPHANTS are complex animals. Inrelative clauses, the two joined noun phrases have to be the same. “He, she and it" are all examples of relative pronouns. O False Relative pronouns include who, whom, which and that. (142) Using a conjunction like "and" is the same as combining clauses with a relative pronoun. O False The following sentence "My uncle who is rich lives in New York City." is made up of the following sentence: (a) "My uncle lives in New York City." anc "My uncleis rich." ° True My uncle is rich->"who is rich" and then joins My uncle...lives in NYC.
When a second sentence is turned into a restrictive clause it acts like an adjective phrase (clause) modifying that first noun ° True It follows the form of post modifying adjectives like: the land DOWN UNDER. Here DOWN UNDER follows the land, but acts as an adjective to modify it. (137)
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