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conjunctions

Conjunctions are words that connect other words, phrases, or clauses within a sentence. They express relationships such as addition, alternation, contrast, cause, and condition, enabling the construction of more complex statements. Conjunctions belong to a small, closed class of function words that signal logical links between units of syntax.

Coordinating conjunctions join elements of equal grammatical status. The best-known set, often remembered by the acronym

Subordinating conjunctions introduce dependent clauses that cannot stand alone. They show relationships such as cause, time,

Correlative conjunctions come in pairs to link balanced elements. Typical pairs include either…or, neither…nor, both…and, not

Usage notes: when joining two independent clauses with a coordinating conjunction, a comma is usually placed

FANBOYS,
comprises
for,
and,
nor,
but,
or,
yet,
so.
Examples:
“She
bought
apples
and
oranges.”
“It
rained,
so
we
stayed
indoors.”
They
can
connect
words,
phrases,
or
independent
clauses.
condition,
or
contrast.
Common
examples
include
because,
since,
although,
while,
if,
when,
after,
before,
unless,
until,
and
whereas.
Examples:
“I
will
go
if
you
come.”
“Although
tired,
she
finished
the
work.”
only…but
also,
and
whether…or.
Example:
“Not
only
did
she
win,
but
she
also
set
a
record.”
These
require
parallel
structure
in
the
connected
elements.
before
the
conjunction.
If
the
dependent
clause
starts
the
sentence,
it
is
often
followed
by
a
comma.
Correlative
conjunctions
demand
parallel
phrasing
and
consistent
linkage
of
the
paired
elements.