No. For this to occur, the word 'for' must be a preposition.
Example: "For the final battle, the emperor chose his strongest warriors."
When the word "for" means "because" it has to follow the independent clause.
"We must surrender, for we have nowhere to hide."
Compare this to using "as" in exactly the same context, where it can come first.
"As we have nowhere to hide, we must surrender."
This appears to be a quirk of using "for" as a conjunction.
"To" can function as a preposition or a conjunction. As a preposition, it shows the direction, location, or destination of an action. As a conjunction, it connects words, phrases, or clauses within a sentence.
No, "so that" is a compound conjunction. It means "in order that."
The word "about" is a preposition. It cannot act as a conjunction to join clauses.
No. With is a preposition. A conjunction is a word that joins two clauses of a sentence, or two words having the same function.
"for" can function as both a preposition and a conjunction. As a preposition, it shows a relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. As a conjunction, it connects words, phrases, or clauses.
"To" can function as a preposition or a conjunction. As a preposition, it shows the direction, location, or destination of an action. As a conjunction, it connects words, phrases, or clauses within a sentence.
No, "so that" is a compound conjunction. It means "in order that."
The word "about" is a preposition. It cannot act as a conjunction to join clauses.
No. With is a preposition. A conjunction is a word that joins two clauses of a sentence, or two words having the same function.
"for" can function as both a preposition and a conjunction. As a preposition, it shows a relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. As a conjunction, it connects words, phrases, or clauses.
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).
No, "about" is a preposition used to indicate a relation to something else. It is not a conjunction, which are words that link words, phrases, or clauses together in a sentence.
"Under" is a preposition, not a conjunction. It is used to show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another element in the sentence.
No, the word "with" is no kind of conjunction. It is a preposition, and may also be used informally as an adverb.
The word BUT can "act" as a preposition but is typically a conjunction and possibly an adverb. In the sentence "No one can help him but himself" the phrase "but himself" is actually an elliptical (truncated) form of "but he can help himself" where BUT is a conjunction. Here the word BUT functions like the word except, which is more consistently defined as a preposition.
It is no kind of conjunction. The word during is a preposition.
In the sentence, "Catching fish is one of the oldest pastimes.":the preposition = of;the verb = is (a linking verb).There is no conjunction or adverb in the sentence.