I have to agree with the other comments- this was extremely helpful to me. I'm taking a test on noun/adverb/adjective clauses soon, and was so confused. Thanks for explaining it so clearly!
Dear Elizabeth, My Mail : sahal.alavi@gmail.com. Would like to correspond. Hope you are doing well. Lessons and the methodology is that you adopt is commendable. I am trying to help a colleague to Teach Arabic and he needs to do some explanation in English and the EGR is really helping it out. May the Almighty Bless and Guide us all. Sahal , Sri Lanka
Elizabeth, your explanation is very clear. I am an ESL teacher and I am preparing to teach on noun clauses tomorrow. I watch videos like yours just to refresh my mind. I have watched about five videos so far, bot none of them is as clear as yours is.
I can't seem to post the addresses to the pages here, but if you go to my website and click on the "Clauses" button in the navigation bar on the left, you'll find more information!
This was VERY helpful! you are so great at explaining the details! although i am still a little mixed up about the different types of noun clauses, i dont know how to distinguish them, which is what is troubling me most.
@SouthernHandful I'm so glad that the video helped you! :) Yes, it can be difficult to identify a noun clause and figure out its role in a sentence.
Start by getting familiar with all of the noun jobs (subject, direct object...). That way, you know that noun clauses have to be performing one of those jobs.
And, of course, I think sentence diagramming is very helpful. :)
I have to agree with the other comments- this was extremely helpful to me. I'm taking a test on noun/adverb/adjective clauses soon, and was so confused. Thanks for explaining it so clearly!
5hensandahowardbird 1 month ago
greetings and many thanks from Turkey, you are probably one of the best english teachers...
iwontbeafallenone 1 month ago
thank you for morocco !!i have a exam tomorrow ! u helped me a lot :)
bigbangshangover 3 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Dear Elizabeth, My Mail : sahal.alavi@gmail.com. Would like to correspond. Hope you are doing well. Lessons and the methodology is that you adopt is commendable. I am trying to help a colleague to Teach Arabic and he needs to do some explanation in English and the EGR is really helping it out. May the Almighty Bless and Guide us all. Sahal , Sri Lanka
135791357ful 10 months ago
Elizabeth, your explanation is very clear. I am an ESL teacher and I am preparing to teach on noun clauses tomorrow. I watch videos like yours just to refresh my mind. I have watched about five videos so far, bot none of them is as clear as yours is.
Keep up the great work.
makinawdandy6699 1 year ago
@makinawdandy6699 Thank you for that comment! It brightened my day. :)
GrammarREVOLUTION 1 year ago
thank you Elizabeth ....waw it's been very very helpful !!!
i've checked your website aswell, but i don't know if you have a clarification about adjective Subordinate and adverbe Subordinate clauses !!
i'd like to see the difference between'em and the noun Subordinate clause! i guess it should clarify many things bout there differences !!!
Greetings from Morocco
Marouane
moonspellord 1 year ago
@moonspellord Hello, Marouane.
I can't seem to post the addresses to the pages here, but if you go to my website and click on the "Clauses" button in the navigation bar on the left, you'll find more information!
Thanks for your comment.
GrammarREVOLUTION 1 year ago
This was VERY helpful! you are so great at explaining the details! although i am still a little mixed up about the different types of noun clauses, i dont know how to distinguish them, which is what is troubling me most.
SouthernHandful 1 year ago
@SouthernHandful I'm so glad that the video helped you! :) Yes, it can be difficult to identify a noun clause and figure out its role in a sentence.
Start by getting familiar with all of the noun jobs (subject, direct object...). That way, you know that noun clauses have to be performing one of those jobs.
And, of course, I think sentence diagramming is very helpful. :)
GrammarREVOLUTION 1 year ago