1. I'm looking forward to the weekend to have a good rest. 2. I'm looking forward to the weekend because of the beautiful weather. 3. I'm looking forward to the weekend because my family will be joining me at the cottage.
Good try, Annie. But I don't think your second sentence includes a dependent clause. In this case, "because of" acts as a compound preposition that introduces a phrase.
2 comments:
1. I'm looking forward to the weekend to have a good rest.
2. I'm looking forward to the weekend because of the beautiful weather.
3. I'm looking forward to the weekend because my family will be joining me at the cottage.
Good try, Annie. But I don't think your second sentence includes a dependent clause. In this case, "because of" acts as a compound preposition that introduces a phrase.
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