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Art.com
Conjunctions connect words or groups
of words to each other.
Neither the dog nor the
cat liked tomato sauce
because they were allergic
to it, but Hildy insisted on
adding sauce and parmesan
cheese to their pasta.
Conjunctions are little words with a big job to do: they link up ideas, in the
form of words, phrases, and clauses, and they let you know how these words
relate to each other. Some of the best-known conjunctions include: and, but, and
or. There are three types of conjunctions.
*Coordinating conjunctions are the basic links
between words or groups of words. Examples:
and, but, or, for, so.
*Correlative conjunctions also link words, phrases,
and clauses, but they're always used in pairs.
Examples: either...or, neither...nor, both...and.
*Subordinating conjunctions link a dependent
clause to an independent clause. An independent
clause is a complete thought or idea. A dependent
clause is not a complete thought by itself; it needs
the independent clause to make sense. But a
dependent clause adds information to or gives
a reason for the independent clause.
Examples
of subordinating conjunctions include:
although, after, if, since, even though, because,
unless, when.
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