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clauses

A clause is a grammatical unit that contains a subject and a predicate. It may form a full sentence by itself (an independent or main clause) or function as part of a larger sentence (a dependent or subordinate clause). The distinction between clauses and phrases hinges on the presence of a finite verb with a subject.

Independent clauses express a complete thought and can stand alone: “The cat slept.” Dependent clauses rely

Two or more independent clauses can be joined to form compound sentences with coordinating conjunctions (for,

In law, a clause is a provision in a contract or statute, such as a confidentiality clause

on
an
independent
clause
to
provide
a
complete
meaning
and
are
introduced
by
subordinating
conjunctions
such
as
because,
since,
although,
or
by
relative
or
interrogative
words.
Subtypes
include
relative
clauses
(which
modify
a
noun),
noun
clauses
(that
she
left
is
uncertain;
acting
as
a
noun),
and
adverbial
clauses
(time,
place,
cause,
condition).
and,
nor,
but,
or,
yet,
so)
or
with
a
semicolon.
A
dependent
clause
at
the
start
of
a
sentence
is
typically
followed
by
a
comma;
when
it
comes
after,
the
comma
may
be
optional.
or
a
termination
clause.
In
computing,
SQL
employs
clauses
such
as
WHERE
and
ORDER
BY
to
constrain
or
sort
data.