but is the best choice
You were exhausted because you walked all the way home.
The correct way it should be stated would be = He was exhausted, yet he*** walked all the way home. = ***the second he may be omitted
Any of the conjunctions could be grammatically correct, depending on what you're trying to say. If your meaning is "Even though he was exhausted, he walked all the way home," or, despite how tired he was, he still walked home, "but" is the appropriate conjunction. He was exhausted, but he walked all the way home. If you instead mean that the cause of his exhaustion was his walk home, "because" should be used. He was exhausted because he walked all the way home. "And" is probably the weakest choice of the three, but is still grammatically correct. It conveys a similar meaning to the sentence using "but." He was exhausted, and he walked all the way home.
"They walked past him" would be the correct one
Both are correct. 'He walked by me' is more colloquial, and also conveys more possible meanings, than 'he walked past me'.
Yes, that sentence is correct. It conveys the idea that someone walked past you without acknowledging or interacting with you.
Yes it is correct.
She quietly walked through the dark hallway in the castle? She ; pronoun quietly ; adverb walked ; past tense verb through ; conjunction the ; definite article dark ; adjective hallway ; common noun in ; conjunction the ; definite article castle ; common noun .
You walked past the pole. You passed by the pole.
Absolutely.
A comma splice is the attempt to join two independent clauses with a comma without a coordinating conjunction. For example, "She walked the dog last night, today she fed it."
No, the correct grammar is "You walked past the girl." The subject ("you") should come before the verb ("walked").