
Dependent Clause: Types, Comma Rules, and the Writing Insight Most Grammar Guides Miss
A dependent clause has a subject and verb but cannot stand alone. Learn three types, comma rules, and how subordinator choice changes what your sentence means.
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A dependent clause has a subject and verb but cannot stand alone. Learn three types, comma rules, and how subordinator choice changes what your sentence means.

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A dependent clause has a subject and verb but cannot stand alone. Learn three types, comma rules, and how subordinator choice changes what your sentence means.

Discover 50 literary devices organized by the effect you want to create. With examples from Toni Morrison, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Shakespeare.

A comma splice joins two independent clauses with a comma alone. This guide covers identification, six fixes, the conjunctive adverb trap, how seven style authorities differ, and when intentional comma splices are accepted in literary prose.

A guide to six daily writing practice methods, the habit-loop science behind consistency, and how to match your approach to your writer type.

Sentence structure controls what readers emphasize, how fast they read, and what they carry into the next paragraph. This guide covers the four canonical types, five rhetorical patterns most guides skip, the stress position, and given-new information packaging.

Writer's block is an umbrella term for five distinct conditions. Discover 5 research-backed types, their neuroscience, and evidence-based techniques matched to each type.

Learn how to improve your writing skills with 10 research-backed techniques. From deliberate practice to daily reading habits, here is what actually moves the needle.

A practical guide to journaling for writers: 9 journal types, morning pages, fiction-specific techniques, Pennebaker's research, and the best tools compared.

A metaphor is a figure of speech that states one thing is another. Learn the six types, how they work, famous literary examples, and how to use them effectively in your writing.

A simile is a comparison using "like" or "as" to link two unlike things. This guide covers all four types, famous examples from Burns to Hughes, and how to write fresh similes that avoid clichés.