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A clause is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb. Some clauses are independent: they can stand alone as sentences. Others are dependent: they cannot stand alone and need an independent clause, or sentence, to support them. These dependent clauses act as adjectives, adverbs or nouns.
A dependent clause that acts as a noun is called a noun clause.
Noun clauses most often begin with the subordinating conjunction that.
Other words that may begin a noun clause are if, how, what, whatever, when, where, whether, which, who, whoever, whom and why.
Since a noun clause acts as a noun, it can do anything that a noun can do. A noun clause can be a subject, a direct object, an indirect object, an object of a preposition, a subject complement, an object complement or an appositive.
Other dependent clauses act as adjectives and adverbs. We can remove them and still have a complete independent clause left, with a subject and verb and any necessary complements.
That is not the case with most noun clauses. Usually, a noun clause is too essential to the sentence to be removed. Consider these examples:
If we remove these noun clauses, what is left will not make much sense:
That is because, in each example above, the noun clause forms a key part of the independent clause: it acts as the subject, the direct object, the object of a preposition. Without those key parts, the independent clauses do not express complete thoughts.
A sentence containing a noun clause is thus the one case in which an "independent" clause may actually need a dependent clause to be complete!
Noun clauses may need to be set off by one or two commas in the following situations.
An appositive is a noun or nominal (a word or word group acting as a noun) that is placed next to another noun to explain it. For example, in the following sentence, the noun phrase the mayor of Riverton is an appositive explaining who John Allen is:
Noun clauses are nominals and can act as appositives. In that case, they may require commas if they are not essential to the meaning of the sentence.
Here, the words his original statement identify which statement is meant, so the noun clause provides information that is merely additional and not essential. For that reason, the clause is set off with commas.
Compare that example to the one below:
In this case, the noun clause is essential for identifying which statement is meant. It therefore takes no commas.
If the noun clause is in an unusual position, it may require a comma:
As the above examples show, we do not normally use a comma for a noun clause acting as subject at the beginning of the sentence, because that is the usual position for a subject. However, a comma may sometimes be needed to prevent confusion if two identical verbs end up side by side:
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