hello grammarians hello rosie hello david we're going to talk about dependent and independent clauses full disclosure this is a relatively advanced part of grammar but it is important to understand because mastering dependent and independent clauses and being able to say why a clause is dependent or independent will help you become a better writer will help you become a stronger writer and make you give your sentences vim and vigor and strength so with all that out of the way let's start with independent clauses because an independent clause is basically a sentence we established previously that all a clause is is just a collection of phrases with a subject and a verb so for example the sentence i ate the pineapple period is an independent clause so it's a it's a couple of phrases so we've got this noun phrase i we've got this verb phrase ate the pineapple and together that becomes a subject and a verb or a predicate so rosie what is a dependent clause so dependent clause is different from an independent clause in that it can't stand on its own okay as a sentence so it includes a subject and a verb but it can't be its own sentence and sometimes you know it might look like a sentence it could start with something like a subordinating conjunction like the word because for example because it was delicious okay and let's be clear here you know obviously this is a this is an utterance that people say you know if you ask me why did you eat the pizza i i would respond by saying because it was delicious why do we climb the mountain because it is there you know um i'm not i'm not saying that this is not not an utterance that is made by native speaking english speakers it is of course it is but you have to be aware that it is a dependent clause and therefore a sentence fragment and part of natural informal speech is that we do use a lot of sentence fragments and sentence fragments are not as common in formal writing you may sometimes use them for effect but i want you to remember that this these videos are about standard american english and a kind of formal version of standard american english and so we're trying to teach you to distinguish between independent and dependent clauses so that you can use them skillfully in the full knowledge and mastery of your choices you got to learn your scales before you can improvise so because it was delicious not a sentence this is a dependent clause because it begins with this subordinating conjunction because you could also work in something like although or while and any of these would make it a dependent clause now if it was just on its own it was delicious yeah of course that's a sentence the the part that makes it dependent is this subordinating conjunction you put that onto the front of it and all of a sudden it needs an independent clause to lean up against i know this is confusing so let's let's take a look at a couple more examples of independent and dependent clauses so the following are independent clauses rosie the bear roared maureen pointed out the monster that's not our pet rabbit and let's do some dependent clauses and then you can see that we'll be able to combine them in two sentences while the salmon flopped that she saw last night unless i'm mistaken so you can see that these are all clauses right we've established that you know each one has a subject and a verb the bear roared the salmon flopped but all of these have some kind of everything in orange has something that's either a subordinating conjunction like while or unless or a relative pronoun like that so while the salmon flopped you can see in this context the bear roared while the salmon flopped you can kind of understand why this is called the dependent clause because by the context of this sentence while the salmon flopped something else was going on right this is kind of like background information and it's in fact not necessary for comprehending the first sentence the first clause the independent clause the bear roared and if we did combine these you would realize that the salmon flopped is just background information right right um but we need to know what else is going on for there to be a while so the bear roared is a perfectly sensical sentence on its own right and while the salmon flopped is providing us with this extra information the bear was roaring while this salmon flopped but if we were just to see the sentence while the salmon flopped on its own like say we didn't have the bear roared it wouldn't make any it would make less sense right because the the presence of this word while indicates that something else is also going on right that's what makes it dependent so we need to have the bear roared likewise maureen pointed out the monster that sentence works fine on its own that she saw last night sure there's a you know sure there's a subject and there's a verb she and saw right she saw something she saw that but this relative pronoun needs to refer back to something and that makes it dependent on the monster so this last one's a little tricky right because you might be looking at this and saying well unless i'm mistaken where's the verb well the verb is kind of hiding in here so unless i am mistaken right so the presence of this subordinating conjunction unless makes this into a dependent clause so unless means it's kind of hinging on some other information so the other information is that's not our pet rabbit unless i'm mistaken now i feel that there should be a comma here so i'm going to put one in that's not our pet rabbit unless i'm mistaken i hope that this has cleared some stuff up so an independent clause is a subject and a verb and it can be a sentence a dependent clause is a subject and a verb but also a subordinating conjunction and it cannot be a sentence you can learn anything david out rosie out