Grade: Grade 5 Subject: English Language Arts Unit: Clauses & Punctuation SAT: StandardEnglishConventions ACT: English

Independent and Dependent Clauses

πŸ“– Learn

A clause is a group of words that has both a subject (who or what) and a verb (action or state). Understanding clauses helps you write more interesting, complex sentences!

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Independent Clause

Can stand alone as a complete sentence. It expresses a complete thought.

Example: "The dog barked loudly."

🀝

Dependent Clause

Cannot stand alone. It needs an independent clause to make sense.

Example: "When the doorbell rang"

πŸ”‘ The Key Difference

Ask yourself: "Does this make sense by itself?"

  • Independent: "The cat jumped on the table." βœ“ Complete thought!
  • Dependent: "Because the cat was hungry." βœ— Wait, what happened?

A dependent clause leaves you asking questionsβ€”it depends on more information!

See It in Action

Watch how clauses work together in sentences:

When the bell rang, the students rushed to lunch.
Independent clause Dependent clause
She finished her homework before dinner started.
Although it was raining, we played outside.

🚨 Signal Words for Dependent Clauses

These words often start dependent clauses. When you see them, look for the independent clause that completes the thought!

when because although if while since after before unless until whenever though

πŸ’‘ Quick Test

If a group of words starts with a subordinating word (like "when," "because," "although") and doesn't feel complete, it's probably a dependent clause!

πŸ’‘ Examples

Let's analyze more examples to see how clauses work.

Example 1

The team won the championship.

Analysis: This is just an independent clause. It has a subject (the team), a verb (won), and expresses a complete thought. It can be a sentence all by itself!

Example 2

Because she studied hard

Analysis: This starts with "because" (a signal word) and leaves us asking "What happened?" It's a dependent clause that needs more information.

Example 3 - Combined

Because she studied hard, she got an A on the test.

Analysis: Now we have both! The dependent clause tells us WHY, and the independent clause tells us WHAT happened. Together, they make a complex sentence.

Example 4

My brother plays guitar, and I play drums.

Analysis: This sentence has TWO independent clauses joined by "and." Both parts could stand alone as complete sentences!

Example 5

I'll go to the park if it stops raining.

Analysis: The independent clause comes first, followed by a dependent clause starting with "if." No comma is needed when the independent clause comes first!

✏️ Practice

Sorting Game: Independent or Dependent?

Read each clause and decide if it's independent (can stand alone) or dependent (needs more).

🎯 Sort the Clauses

Score: 0 Question: 1/8
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Sentence Builder

Combine clauses to build complete sentences. Click clauses to add them to the workspace, then check if you've created a valid sentence.

Build a Complete Sentence

Select one independent clause and one dependent clause:

The children played outside
while their parents cooked dinner
She read her favorite book
because it was too cold
Click clauses above to build your sentence...

βœ… Check Your Understanding

Question 1

Which of these is an independent clause?

Question 2

Which word typically begins a dependent clause?

Question 3

In the sentence "After we finished dinner, we watched a movie," which part is the dependent clause?

Question 4

What makes a clause "dependent"?

Question 5

"Because the alarm didn't ring" is a dependent clause. Which sentence correctly completes it?

πŸš€ Summary & Next Steps

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Independent

Complete thought, can stand alone

🀝

Dependent

Needs an independent clause

🚨

Signal Words

when, because, although, if...

✨

Complex Sentences

Combine both clause types!

πŸ’‘ Writing Tips

  • Use a mix of simple and complex sentences to make your writing more interesting.
  • When a dependent clause comes first, put a comma after it.
  • When the independent clause comes first, you usually don't need a comma.
  • Look for signal words to help identify dependent clauses.

Continue Learning

  • Move on to Commas and Semicolons to learn proper punctuation
  • Practice combining clauses in your own writing
  • Look for independent and dependent clauses when you read