Nothing like that. Which club a player wants to join or leave is decided by the player and his agent, along with the management of the clubs. But usually, the management urges a player to leave if they're in need of the money and their buyout clause has been played.
It is a clause in a player's contract with their club which guarantees that the club will allow them to leave if another club makes an offer meeting some minimum value (specified in the clause).
Having a buyout agreement in place lets you decide what will happen if a partner or owner wants to leave the company. The website Nolo can help you to get informed or find a lawyer.
santa clause will not come santa clause will leave you coal:(
There was a clause in his contract that meant he would have to give them more notice if he was going to leave.
I find it difficult to figure out what your question means. If you are asking if the sentences: "She wanted to leave early or She wanted to stay overnight?" contain dependent clause, the answer is NO. "She wanted to leave early." and "She wanted to stay overnight." are both independent clauses. the OR used to connect the two clauses is a coordinate conjunction. you can tell if the other clause is a dependent clause if the conjunction used is a subordinating conjunction.
the clause that couldn't stand on its own is called: Dependent clause or Subordinating clause. example: before you leave for work today. another would be: After the long exhausting day. These two examples may contain a subject and a verb (you - subject and leave - verb [for the first example]) but this group of words is dependent clause because this group of words does not express a complete thought and it needs to be attached to a main clause or a independent clause. By the way, a clause that could stand on its own is called a main clause or an idependent clause. An example of which is "I slept for three hours." This in fact is an independent clause or a simple sentence. but if you attach the dependent clause - "After a long exhausting day." you will have a sentence that looks like this: After the long exhausting day, I slept for three hours. (this now becomes a complex sentence. It is a combination of an independent clause and a dependent clause in one sentence.
Yes, the sentence "when he officially files leave of absence" is not grammatically correct. It should be "when he officially files for a leave of absence."
You can leave out the relative pronoun in defining relative clauses when it is the object of the verb in the relative clause, and when the relative pronoun is immediately followed by the verb. For example, "The book I read" instead of "The book that I read."
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Yes, "as soon as" is a subordinating conjunction. It is used to introduce a subordinate clause and indicates that the action in the subordinate clause happens immediately after the action in the main clause. For example, "I will leave as soon as the meeting ends."
The two main types of subordinate clauses are adverbial clauses (which modify verbs and answer questions like when, where, why, or how something happens) and adjectival clauses (which modify nouns and add extra information about them). These clauses cannot stand alone as complete sentences and are dependent on the main clause for meaning.
The children leave hay for Sinterklaas's Horse. By the way what ever you want to call "Santa Clause" he is fake.