A finite clause is a fundamental unit in grammar. It is characterized by the presence of a subject and a finite verb, which is a verb form that shows tense (past, present, future) and agrees with the subject in number and person.
Finite clauses can stand alone as complete sentences (independent clauses) or be part of a larger sentence (dependent/subordinate clauses). For example, in ‘She sings beautifully’, ‘She sings beautifully’ is an independent finite clause. In ‘I know that she sings beautifully’, ‘that she sings beautifully’ is a subordinate finite clause.
Finite clauses are the building blocks of most sentences. They allow us to express complete thoughts, describe actions, and form complex sentences by combining multiple ideas.
A common confusion arises with non-finite clauses (infinitives, participles, gerunds), which lack a finite verb and do not express tense or agree with a subject in the same way. For instance, ‘to sing’ is non-finite, while ‘sings’ is finite.
Q: What is the difference between a finite and non-finite verb?
A: A finite verb shows tense and agrees with the subject, while a non-finite verb (infinitive, participle, gerund) does not.
Q: Can a finite clause be a question?
A: Yes, finite clauses can be declarative, interrogative, imperative, or exclamatory.
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