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Manner Clause

This document discusses adverb clauses that introduce manner. It provides examples of manner clauses introduced by subordinating conjunctions like "as if" and "as though". These clauses describe someone's behavior or how something is done. Word order places the manner clause after the main clause. Tenses used in the manner clause depend on whether the situation is real or unreal - past tense implies unreality while present or future can imply reality.

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Rica Sugandi
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
518 views

Manner Clause

This document discusses adverb clauses that introduce manner. It provides examples of manner clauses introduced by subordinating conjunctions like "as if" and "as though". These clauses describe someone's behavior or how something is done. Word order places the manner clause after the main clause. Tenses used in the manner clause depend on whether the situation is real or unreal - past tense implies unreality while present or future can imply reality.

Uploaded by

Rica Sugandi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ADVERB CLAUSES LEVEL: I NTERMEDIATE

C A R M E N L U I S A P R E Z A M A R O

Manner clauses
They are introduced by subordinating conjunctions like as if and as though.
These clauses are used to talk about someone's behaviour or the way something is
done/said, etc.

Uses:
- As if and as though mean the same:
He sounds as if/ as though he has got a cold.

Word order: a manner clause always goes after the main clause (final position):
subject + main verb / subordinating conjunction + subject + verb :
She looks as if she were a model.

Tenses used:
1) After as if/ as though we use a past tense when we are talking about an unreal
situation. Were can be used instead of was with I, she, he, it.
She behaves as if she were/was the boss. (=Unreal in the present: she isnt the boss)
She treats me as though she were/was my mother. (=Unreal in the present: she is
not my mother)
She talked about Marilyn Monroe as if they had been close friends. (=Unreal in the
past: they hadnt been close friends).

2) After as if/ as though we can use present or future tenses. We use present
tenses when the situation can be real.
It looks as though everyone else has gone home.
It looks as if it is going to rain.

* Notice: in an informal style, like is used instead of as if/ as though. This is not
considered correct in a formal style:
It looks like it is going to rain.

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