- The act of joining.
- The state of being joined.
- A joint or simultaneous occurrence; concurrence: the conjunction of historical and economic forces that created a depression.
- One resulting from or embodying a union; a combination: “He is, in fact, a remarkable conjunction of talents” (Jerry Adler).
- (Abbr. conj.) Grammar.
- The part of speech that serves to connect words, phrases, clauses, or sentences.
- Any of the words belonging to this part of speech, such as and, but, as, and because.
- Astronomy. The position of two celestial bodies on the celestial sphere when they have the same celestial longitude.
- Logic.
- A compound proposition that has components joined by the word and or its symbol and is true only if both or all the components are true.
- The relationship between the components of a conjunction.
[Middle English coniunccioun, from Old French conjunction, conjuncion, from Latin coniūnctiō, coniūnctiōn-, a joining, conjunction (in grammatical sense, translation of Greek sundesmos, binding together, conjunction), from coniūnctus, past participle of coniungere, to join. See conjoin.]
conjunctional con·junc'tion·al adj.conjunctionally con·junc'tion·al·ly adv.




