Sentence examples for associated clause from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

He wrote that the provision could not be rescued by an associated clause in Article I that gives Congress broad authority to make laws "necessary and proper" to carrying out its designated responsibilities.

Similar(58)

A sentence is defined here as a main clause with all its associated dependent clauses, and for the purposes of analysis, is identified by orthographical cues (i.e., begins with a capital letter and ends with a full stop, Aarts 2014).

In summary, the prosodic patterns which relate to the least delicate distinctions in the BH mood system are realized by means of segments strongly associated with clause-initial position.

On the other hand, there are risks associated with residuals clauses, because if you grant this right to the other side, your confidential information could be used by others, including competitors.

Relative clauses associated with numeral phrases may appear in two positions: (a) the position between the unit word and the noun and (b) the position preceding the numeral (Huang et al. 2009).

There can be hidden unexpected costs and clauses associated with running the software and continuing to use it in the future.

A spokeswoman for the Queens Borough Public Library, which announced this week it would close 14 of its 62 branches on weekends because of budget shortfalls, the costs associated with extreme conditions clause are not significant.

The following section discusses those systems at clause rank associated with interpersonal meanings.

If the core of the explanation of why (1) and (3) are consistent and, more generally, why substitution fails in the case of co-referring proper names, is that the substitution alters the ILF associated with the complement clause, then it would seem that the above translation, for the very same reason, should not be guaranteed to preserve truth.

The tendency for negation outside the scope of (certain) negated propositional attitude predicates (e.g., a does not believe that $p$) to be interpreted as associated with the embedded clause (e.g., a believes that not-$p$); this is so-called "neg-raising", to which we return below.

In the realization of different mood types, the main interpersonal zone of the clause is associated with the Finite/Predicator and the Negotiator, either separately or acting in combination, a claim which will be discussed in more detail in the following section.

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