Adjective Clause dan Pengidentifikasiannya
ADJECTIVE CLAUSE PRONOUNS
Adjective clause
adalah sebuah anak kalimat yang dapat mendeskripsikan, mencirikan, atau pun memberikan
informasi tambahan mengenai kata benda yang ada pada induk kalimat. Sebuah adjective clause membutuhkan adjective clause pronoun untuk menghubungkan induk kalimat dengan anak kalimat tersebut.
Contoh adjective clause pronouns adalah who,
whom, which, that, dan whose. Mereka
memiliki perbedaan penggunaan sesuai kebutuhan. Mari kita bahas perbedaan
penggunaan tersebut.
Adjective
Clause Pronouns Used as The Subject
Beberapa
jenisnya adalah who, which, dan that. Who digunakan untuk kata benda berupa orang, which digunakan untuk kata benda selain orang, dan that bisa digunakan untuk kata benda
apapun. Pada jenis ini, adjective clause
pronouns hanya boleh diikuti kata
kerja atau verb karena sebuah subjek
memerlukan verb supaya bisa menjadi kalimat.
Berikut contoh-contoh kalimatnya :
·
Julian
who is wealthy man is body builder.
·
Sella
who help me is from New Zealand.
·
We
are observing plants which grow at the school garden.
·
I
saw the police that kicked a wild dog.
Adjective
Clause Pronouns Used as The Object
Beberapa
jenisnya adalah whom, which, dan that. Hampir sama seperti penjelasan dia atas, whom digunakan untuk kata benda berupa
orang, which digunakan untuk kata
benda selain orang, dan that bisa digunakan
untuk kata benda apapun. Pada jenis ini, adjective
clause pronouns hanya boleh
diikuti subjek, lalu predikat karena sebuah kalimat minimal terdiri atas subjek
dan predikat, sedangkan objek bersifat opsional. Berikut contoh-contoh kalimatnya
:
·
Fathur
whom I disturb is in the car.
·
I
like the woman whom I help at the hospital.
·
The
meeting which i went was interesting.
·
The
picture which Olga was looking was
beautiful.
Using
Whose
Whose digunakan
untuk menyatakan benda milik. Arti dari whose
sama dengan kata ganti kepunyaan yang umumnya kita ketahui seperti her, his, its, yours, their, our, dan
lain-lain. Hanya saja memiliki perbedaan penggunaan yakni whose digunakan pada adjective
clause. Whose diikuti oleh kata benda. Berikut contoh-contoh kalimatnya :
·
The
student whose composition I read writes
well.
·
I
hate the boy whose bicycle was stolen.
·
Mr.
Bon has a antiqe telephone whose value is inestimbale.
Catatan
:
Yang bergaris bawah = adjective clause yang
berfungsi sebagai anak kalimat.
MENGIDENTIFIKASI INDUK DAN ANAK KALIMAT
https://www.pressreader.com.vlib.interchange.at/usa/the-washington-post/20201110/page/57
Online grocery
shopping vs. nutrition
·
The Washington Post
·
10 Nov 2020
·
FROM CONSUMER REPORTS
ISTOCKA woman
examines a grocery delivery app. Research shows nutritional information isn’t
always available for online groceries. Even if found, the material isn’t always
easy to access or read.
More
Americans have turned to online grocery shopping during the pandemic than ever
before, both for the convenience and peace of mind it offers. If a recent study
published in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior finds a downside: When you shop online, you
may have a harder time judging the nutritional quality of the food you’re
buying.
Researchers
at the University of Minnesota shopped for the same 26 foods (mostly packaged
ones) at a dozen different grocery websites, including national retailers like
Amazon Fresh and Whole Foods and Midwestern stores such as Hy-vee and Coborn’s.
They found that nutrition or ingredient information wasn’t available for 15
percent of those foods, on average.
And even
when the information was there, it wasn’t always easy to access or read. Shoppers would
typically have to click away from the main product page to find it, or it was poorly displayed. Common problems included small font size, blurry type,
and information being presented sideways or
upside down.
“When it’s not available immediately, shoppers may not know to search around to find the
information,” says Kelly Olzenak, the study’s lead
author. Such deterrents may help explain why
a 2018 survey from the International Food Information Council found that 48
percent of online shoppers said they read nutrition information before buy
ing items,
compared with 66 percent of inperson shoppers.
The information on Nutrition Facts labels and ingredient lists, which the Food and Drug Administration requires on
packaged foods, can be integral to a person’s health. “A person with heart failure may rely on the Nutrition
Facts panels to choose foods low in sodium; someone with diabetes needs to know
the carbohydrate count per serving,” Olzenak says. And a recent update
of the Nutrition Facts label makes it even more valuable for people trying to
make healthier choices.
“Now, the number of calories per serving is in larger, bolder type; added
sugar amounts must be declared, and
actual amounts of key vitamins are listed,” says Christen Cupples Cooper,
founding director of the Nutrition and Dietetics Program at the College of
Health Professions at Pace University in New York. Plus, the serving sizes now listed better reflect typical serving sizes than they used to.
The University of Minnesota researchers hope their findings will nudge
online grocers to create features that
help consumers make more informed choices. Virtual grocery shopping is only
going to become more common. The pandemic might
have pushed people to dip their toe in the online grocery world sooner than they might have, but even precovid, market
research firms Nielsen and FMI predicted that 70 percent of consumers would be
grocery shopping online by 2024. That means
consumers are going to need ways to check nutrition that are as easy as it is in person, where they can just pick up a
product, flip it over and find what they’re looking for.
“In the world of nutrition there are constantly new
trends, fads and products, and that can
make choosing foods and eating a balanced diet feel challenging and
overwhelming,” Olzenak says. “The more accessible
and understandable nutrition information is to consumers, the better.” Meanwhile,
how can you make sure you get the information you need while online shopping?
The first thing is to remind yourself to check for it. Nutrition Facts
labels and ingredients lists may not be as easily accessible as they are
when you shop in-person, they’re available
online more often than not. It may just take a little scrolling and
clicking around to find them, Olzenak says.
See if the websites you go to let you filter by product classifications that you might see on the front of a food package,
such as gluten-free or nondairy. “This could be
helpful if you have a specific dietary
need like celiac disease or lactose intolerance and want to narrow down what
products could be suitable,” Cooper says.
But you should still take the extra step to check for the full nutrition
information, because such filters won’t tell you
anything about the calories, added sugars, saturated fat or other key nutritional
components.
Also, remember that some of the healthiest foods — such as fresh fruit and
vegetables and fish — aren’t required to carry a nutrition label at all, or are single ingredient foods, such as brown rice
or chickpeas. “I encourage my clients to choose
whole foods that don’t need labels,”
Cooper says “because the nutrition speaks for
itself.”
Consumer Reports is an independent, nonprofit organization that works side by side with consumers to create a fairer, safer, and healthier world. CR does not endorse products or services, and does not accept advertising. CR has no financial relationship with advertisers in this publication. Read more at Consumerreports.org.
Catatan
:
Yang
bergaris bawah = anak kalimat
Yang berwarna merah = induk kalimat
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