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Restrictive factors of solar energy storage

pronunciation: Intonation-

Restrictive: The students who had to take their final exams today are tired. With the non-restrictive sentence, the relative clause has its own intonation pattern, and it interrupts the

as Vs which in Non-restrictive Attributive Clauses

What is the difference between them when they are used in Non-restrictive Attributive Clauses? (Only answers to the above cases will do.) Are the answers in red the

Comma after the conjunction That: restrictive/non-restrictive

Hello Everyone, In the following sentence, quoted from the Oxford dictionary, the comma after " that " sounds wrong to me as it changes the intended meaning and the

ne que + de / du, de la, des | WordReference Forums

Le Trésor ne dit rien, pourtant, de l''article partitif qui la suit. Voici le genre de phrase à laquelle je pense : « On n''avait de preuves que contre des prisonniers. » Merci

X of (Y + restrictive relative clause)? | WordReference Forums

I''m trying to translate a syntactical test I''ve developed into English. The basic, initial structure is "X of Y is Z" (say, "the name of the dog is Lucky"). The issue is that now I need to

Restrictive versus non-restrictive

For Adjective clause, Are ''that'' strictly used for restrictive clause and '' which '' is strictly used for non- restrictive clause? I don''t think so, firee. I believe that some speakers also

people, like some, who study [non-restrictive relative clause?]

Hi, everyone. Please read the following. Recent surveys show that more than 500 million people speak English as their mother tongue. About 300 million people speak English

Inversion after negative or restrictive adverbs

Hi! I''ve always thought inversion after negative or restrictive adverbs (EDIT: in initial position) was obligatory in formal English, but now I''m doubtful. Can someone help me?

which / that

A restrictive clause is essential to the meaning of a sentence; a non-restrictive clause is not. Simply put, if you use which, you are introducing a non-restrictive clause, and

comma before ''who''/''whose'' [restrictive clause?, relative

Hi all, Can you tell me if ''who were always willing to help'' is a restrictive clause here? I would like to thank John and Susan who were always willing to help. Similarly, for