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ADJECTIVE CLAUSE

GRUP 11

Iqbal Rachman Wahid


Irvan Maulana
ADJECTIVE CLAUSE

Adjectiv Clause Is Dependent Clause That Modificate Or Change


Noun. Exactly It Give A View, Introduce Or Give More Information
About Noun
■Adjective Clause
subject + relative pronoun + adjective

Relative pronoun :
(who, whom, which, whose, that)
USING RELATIVE PRONOUN
■ WHO
Example :
Simple sentence
The girl is beautiful, She lives in Banda Aceh
sub 1 sub 2 noun

The girl who lives in Banda Aceh is beautiful


sub 1 R. P N
■ WHOM

Simple sentense
The girl is beautiful, I saw her yesterday.
s o

Relative pronoun
The girl whom I saw yesterday is beautiful
■ That

Exemple
The girl who lives in banda aceh is beautiful
The girl that lives in banda aceh is beautiful

The girl whom I saw is beautiful


The girl that I saw is beautiful
■ Which

a. Subject pronoun
The plane is big, it flew in the sky
s s
The plane which flew in the sky is big
s R.P
b. Object pronoun
The plane is big, I saw it
s o
The plane which I saw is big
s R.P
■ WHOSE

Exemple:
The man called taxi. His car was blew out
s s
the man whose car was blew out called taxi
s R.P
THIS YEAR, RUPIAH IS PREDICTED
WILL BE NUMBER 1 IN ASIA
Some analysts of the most accurate version of Bloomberg predicted that Rupiah will
rise from the worst position to be the number one among other Asian currencies this
year.
According to Lloyds Banking Group Plc, the rupiah will strengthen by 6.8 percent in
2014 to a level of 11,400 per U.S. dollar. Meanwhile, Societe Generale SA will see the
rupiah was at 10,250 at the end of next year. In comparison, the median of 23
analysts surveyed by Bloomberg predict the rupiah will be at the level of 12,200 per
U.S. dollar.
Among the 10 countries of Asia, only China can beat Indonesian growth. There are
several factors that will allegedly keep the Rupiah. One of them, a steady growth of
the Indonesian economy and the reduce of trade deficit. Two factors are again the
main attraction for foreign funds to re-invest in Indonesia.
“We predict the current value of the rupiah is below as it should be (undervalued)
considered the dynamic growth in Indonesia,” said Jeavon Lolay, Global Research
Director of Lloyds .
He added that the Indonesian economy will move in line with the positive growth in
the global economy, which in turn will help to restore the level of exports in the next
second quarter.
As a record, Indonesia’s currency has gained 0.7 percent this month to 12,085 per
U.S. dollar. This is the best reinforcement among 11 Asian most frequently currencies
traded.
THANK YOU

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