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So that you heard only the clause beginning with "but," and not what preceded it.
Propositional attitude, psychological state usually expressed by a verb that may take a subordinate clause beginning with "that" as its complement.
A dramatic action consists of a project (someone sets out to do something), followed by a contradiction or reversal (as like as not a clause beginning with the word "but").
Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes...There are numerous sets of truths that are held to be self-evident here, each of them enumerated in a clause beginning with the word "that".
If in doubt, ask yourself how the clause beginning who/whom would read in the form of a sentence giving he, him, she, her, they or them instead: if the who/whom person turns into he/she/they, then "who" is right; if it becomes him/her/them, then it should be "whom".
Similar observations can be made for other intentional states and the reports made of them — especially when these reports contain an object clause beginning with 'that' and followed by a complete sentence (e.g., she thinks that p; he intends that p; she hopes that p; he fears that p; she sees that p).
Similar(53)
A conditional clause begins with WHERE followed by the condition.
Critical review of the clause begins with a study of the terms in the plain language of the clause: "No Senator or Representative shall, during the Time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil Office under the Authority of the United States, which shall have been created, or the Emoluments whereof shall have been increased during such time...."....
This is a topic of enormous controversy, but one can begin to get a grasp of it by noticing that thoughts are typically referred to, or expressed by, sentential complements, or clauses beginning with that.
Verbal modes include indicative ("he goes"), interrogative ("did he go?"), imperative ("go!"), optative ("may he go"), participles ("going, gone"), and other forms corresponding to English-language subordinate clauses i.e., clauses beginning with "if," "when," and so forth.
The selection of clauses began with selecting verbs that did not obviously realise a single process type.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com