Evan TS#13 (Bruce)
Today, we tackled clauses again. However, it was more because we were focused on the nitty gritty of the sentence. This happened by accident. We were working on adjective clauses again, he was asked to omit the relative pronoun if he could. He was struggling with knowing when he should. The difference being if the clause describes the subject or the object. If you omit the relative pronoun from the clause describing the subject, there is a mix up with the verbs in the clauses. I had to break down an individual clause and describe the idea of "complete thought" to Bruce, though that proved rather easy. We went into detail about what a subject is, and he came to the intersection of nouns and subjects. This proved more confusion as it was difficult for him to grasp that a subject must be a noun, but not all nouns are subjects. It was hard to describe his mistake to him because of how logic and language intersect. I used the sentence, "a square is a rectangle" to show how that worked, and I think he got the picture. He had to leave quickly this time, our session was ended very briefly.
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