The Independent Clause

The Independent Clause

The independent clause is a clause or a sentence phrase that stands alone; we use them in sentence diagrams; its antithesis is a dependent clause; An example of an independent clause is, “A cat eats a rat”;

A dependent clause is a clause or a sentence phrase that does not stand alone; in sentence diagrams, we grammatically call a dependent clause a fragment; an example of a dependent clause is “Because the rats are pests”; the sentence structure sure sounds like a fragment (even if you were typing on a word processor application on a computer, it would show a green or blue underline which requires a grammar check);

While independent and dependent clauses are not only limited to sentence diagrams, they also reflect living beings and many other objects in pairs; a pair is two dependent clauses merged into an independent clause; shoes, socks, animals, and living beings themselves are pairs as examples;

From 1 Corinthians 11:11, it states that: “in Yah-Hovah, however, a woman is not independent of a man, nor is a man independent of a woman”; i, Juan Mirieth Auriel state: “by divine will, a man is dependent on a woman, and a woman is dependent on a man”; thereby, man and woman are a pair of beings;

Male and female are also a pair; a male needs a female, and a female needs a male; Elohim made a man for a woman and made a woman for a man; in every man exists a female aspect; likewise, in every woman exists a male aspect;

Little and behold: A man is not a man without a woman; likewise, a woman is not a woman without a man;

A man, or male, is a dependent clause; a woman, or female, is also a dependent clause; the union of male (man) and female (woman) to one creates an independent clause, the will to return to the kingdom of his innermost.

https://glorian.org/ https://samaelaunweor.org/