No, it cannot be a conjunction. Work is a verb, or a noun, and can be used as an adjunct or adjective (work boots, work schedule).
No, it is not a conjunction. The word work is a noun with several related meanings, or a verb.
The word "can" is a modal verb (or a noun), not any kind of conjunction. The term correlative conjunction refers to a PAIR of conjunctions that work separately as a conjunction, such as either/or or neither/nor.
The conjunction "for" is a coordinating conjunction meaning since, or because. Example: I do not steal for it is wrong.
Individual Work Order
The conjunction in the phrase "be honest with your friends or risk losing them" is "or." This is a coordinating conjunction, not a correlating conjunction. Correlating conjunctions work in pairs to connect equivalent elements, while coordinating conjunctions connect words, phrases, or clauses of equal importance.
Actually, "for" is neither an adjective nor a verb. It is either a preposition or a conjunction. Preposition: I work for a large software company. Conjunction: I left the celebration early, for I still had much work to do.
It can be, to mean although. It can also be an adverb.It acts as a conjunction in "Though he failed, he was still honored."It is also used as part of the compound conjunction "even though."
After I finish my work, I will go to the gym. (After I finish my work, I will go to the gym.)
In conjunction with
The comma is optional, but should be used if one or both of the clauses is long.
The word "after" can function as a preposition, adverb, or conjunction in a sentence. It is commonly used to indicate time or sequence of events, such as "after dinner" (preposition), "arriving shortly after" (adverb), or "I'll call you after I finish work" (conjunction).
It is a conjunction.