A clause is a sort of sentence within a sentence. In some cases they can be joined together with conjunctions such as or, and or but. For example: He put on his coat and they walked to the beach. "He put on his coat" is one clause and "They walked to the beach" is another. Because they do not depend on one another and are joined by a coordinating conjunction (the word and) such clauses are referred to as coordinate clauses.
Yes, the word "and" is a conjunction. It is a coordinating conjunction used to join words or independent clauses. It is one of the conjunctions that form the mnemonic FANBOYS, listing all the seven coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so).
No. Or is a conjunction. It is one of the 7 coordinating conjunctions, and may be used in a combined form with the word "either."
A couple examples of coordinating conjunctions are... ,and & ,but Do you think they'd operate in pairs? Here's an example of a sentence. Mom will go to the mall, but dad will go play golf. Did I use more than one coordinating conjunction?
It's one hundred five because one hundred and five is 100.5 because and is another word for a decimal point
Some common subordinating conjunctions are:which, how, that, if, because, while, since, though, although, lest, unless, forSome subordinating conjunctions based on time are: as, when, after, before, until, while, since.(notice that while can mean although, and the words as, since, for can all mean because)Some subordinating conjunctions contain more than one word: as long as, even though, now that* All conjunctions are subordinating except for the 7 coordinating conjunctions defined by the acronym FANBOYS : for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so.
Some examples of conjunctions that are not coordinating conjunctions used to combine clauses in a compound sentence are "although," "because," "since," and "while." These are subordinating conjunctions that introduce dependent clauses and cannot connect independent clauses on their own.
Some common subordinating conjunctions include "because," "although," "since," "while," "after," and "if." These words are used to introduce dependent clauses in complex sentences that provide additional information or context to the main clause.
Injunctions are not a part of speech. Conjunctions, however, are one of the parts of speech.
Subordinating Conjunctions are conjunctions that come at the beginning of clauses and make a clause dependent on another clause. They also show a relationship between one clause and another. If we take the Independent Clause, "He went to the store," and we put a subordinating conjunction at the beginning of that clause, "Since," the clause becomes dependent on another sentence to make it complete. "Since he went to the store." Notice that this sentence can no longer stand alone. When we add a subordinating conjunction to the beginning of a clause we must attach it to an independent clause--"Since he went to the store, I got my ice cream." The subordinating conjunction also shows a relationship between the first clause and the second clause. It was BECAUSE he went to the store that I got my ice cream. The reader can tell that there would be NO ice cream if he hadn't. Some examples of subordinating conjunctions are: As soon as Whenever Wherever When After that Because Since
A clause is a sort of sentence within a sentence. In some cases they can be joined together with conjunctions such as or, and or but. For example: He put on his coat and they walked to the beach. "He put on his coat" is one clause and "They walked to the beach" is another. Because they do not depend on one another and are joined by a coordinating conjunction (the word and) such clauses are referred to as coordinate clauses.
A clause is a sort of sentence within a sentence. In some cases they can be joined together with conjunctions such as or, and or but. For example: He put on his coat and they walked to the beach. "He put on his coat" is one clause and "They walked to the beach" is another. Because they do not depend on one another and are joined by a coordinating conjunction (the word and) such clauses are referred to as coordinate clauses.
Coordinating conjunctions are used to connect two independent clauses or items of equal importance in a sentence, such as "and," "but," and "or." Subordinating conjunctions are used to join an independent clause with a dependent clause, indicating a relationship of time, cause and effect, or contrast, such as "because," "while," and "although."
No. Or is one of the seven "coordinating conjunctions" that join independent clauses.The seven are for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so -- remembered by the mnemonic word 'fanboys.'
Yes! They are: for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so. An easy way of remembering these is to think of the acronym FANBOYS, where each of the seven letters represents one of the coordinating conjunctions.
Yes, but not necessarily: for example, so that.
Yes, it is one of the 7 coordinating conjunctions, that can combine two independent clauses. The 7 conjunctions are for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so (FANBOYS is the acronym mnemonic for them).