I will accompany you if you desire. If is the conjunction in this sentence.
I will respect you if you are honest with me is the right grammar of the sentence.
the teacher told me to right a lot of conjunctions in my sentences
The swallows fly to warm countries since the weather is usually cold. The right conjunction should be because.
If you combine two independent clauses (two sentences) into one sentence, you need to use a comma and a conjunction. Right: I am hungry, and I am tired. Right: I am hungry, but I am not going to eat. Wrong: I am hungry and I am cold. Wrong: I am hungry, I am cold. You could also use a semicolon if the two thoughts are closely related. If you use a semicolon, do not use a conjunction. Right: I am hungry; I am going to eat. Wrong: I am hungry; and I am going to eat.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb meaning "right away."
The word 'why' is not a pronoun; the word why is an adverb, a conjunction, an exclamation, and a noun (plural 'whys').EXAMPLESadverb: Why is he late? (the subject of the sentence is he, 'He is late why')conjunction: I will tell you why he is late.exclamation: Why, that's not right!noun: When you know the whys and the wherefores you will get it.
A conjunction can be used to connect words in a sentence that have the same function (he and I, left and returned, right or wrong, big and tall, slowly but surely). Many conjunctions are used to join clauses in sentences, either independent or dependent clauses.
No. The conjunction WHEN should be used instead of SINCE.Grammatically, you could have the proper sentence "The swallows are flying to a warmer country since the weather has become cold." Either since or as or forcould be used, but any would mean because.
"I thought about what he'd said soon I realized he was right." Is a run-on sentence. The problem starts where it says "said". This is the proper way of saying it:"I thought about what he'd said, and soon I realized he was right."Or, another correct way:"I thought about what he'd said. Soon I realized he was right."It is because it is two subjects and two predicates.Subject1: IPredicate1: thoughtSubject2: IPredicate2: realizedYou can make them into two complete sentences or separate them with a comma and add a conjunction. The conjunction to the proper way is "and". I hope this helped!
yes i can, can you? "Your homework efforts this term have been inconsistent in conjunction with your ability Susan. You naughty, naughty girl. Get in my office right now, you need a spanking".
All right is a coordinating conjunction, I do believe.
There are no grammatical prohibitions to using the conjunction "and" to begin a complete sentence. Stylistically, such use of "and" is appropriate for a sentence that is providing additional information to something stated previously and yet that is also important enough to be highlighted in its own right.