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Euphoreon1980
6 months ago

Neither. It is a fashionable adverbial destination. “How” is the adverb.

Edit: The comma is of course not wrong.

EditEdit: is very late and I’ve got something messed up. It is a modal subjunction kit, no modale adverbiale determination.

“How” is the subjunction.

Euphoreon1980
6 months ago
Reply to  NurMathe7

Adverbs are a word type.

Euphoreon1980
6 months ago

No, they’re both subjunctions. A question can also contain, as here, an auxiliary charge.

Question pronouns really stand directly for a noun (Nomen). So, “Who* shot at the clock?

The sentence contains no comma and no conjugated verb at the end of the sentence (“turned” is a participatory).

“*How can I solve the task?” is a question expert.

MaxMusterman353
6 months ago

Hey, I’m a little desperate, is this really a subjunction?

  • A political system says how to decide in a group.

And it’s different here, isn’t it?

  • He asks how to solve the task.

I think it’s a question pronoun in the last example.

Euphoreon1980
6 months ago

No, I was on the wood road at the time. It is a (modal) subjunction. 🙈 Therefore also my irritation with the comma.

Relative rates are initiated with Pronomina, because they determine a noun closer. (…the man who eaten the chicken…)

A subjunction is recognized at a subjunction (“as”) at the beginning of the subjunction and a conjugated verb at the end of the sentence.

“It shows how* he acts in politics.”

A fashionable adverbial determination would be “He edits the board with* the hammer.”

Sorry, my mistake.

MaxMusterman353
6 months ago

I think the word here is not a relative pronoun, but a question pronoun. I would still be very happy for a confirmation.

MinusDrei651
6 months ago

A question pronoun is, for example, “who” or “what”, such as:

“Whoever did this is guilty

“What did that”

“Where” is also abused as a question pronoun:

The one who did “where”

Question words, “what” by the one to replace

Question words to be replaced by the

In the case of “how” it is called a subordinate conjunction or also subjunction.

LG

MaxMusterman353
6 months ago
Reply to  MinusDrei651

Thank you for your explanation. I was just insecure here. Is it really a subjunction?

MinusDrei651
6 months ago

I think that because this word, on the one hand, puts together two phrases (conjunction) and, on the other hand, has a direct relation to the subset sentence – one cannot replace or leave this word.

For example, a “and” on the other hand, can usually be replaced very simply by a comma, because it is not part of the sentence and (we also learn) we already learn to replace “and” as well as not to use too often

The “how” is a somewhat economical “just as”

“Genauso” refers directly to the contents of the main set and the “how” represents a comparison between the main set and the auxiliary set

Subjunctions are initiations and thus an integral part of the sentence

The “how” connects and leads the comparison

If there are professionals here, I like to correct if I’m wrong “yet” so I understood it 😅