Yes, AND is arguably the most common coordinating conjunction. It is followed in instances of use by the subordinating conjunction THAT.
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β 7y agoconjunction is a part of speech that connects two words.
No, it is not.
The idiomatic construction "such as" is a determiner, closer to an adjective or adverb, and not a conjunction. It means "for example."
Coordination
No it's a conjunction.
and
Yes, the word 'conjunction' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a joining of two or more things.
The various conjunction used in sentences include correlative, common, subordinating, and coordinating conjunctions, which are all used differently.
The word "for" is not an adjective of any kind. It is either a preposition or a conjunction.
Yes, the noun 'why' is a common noun; a general word for a reason or an explanation.The word 'why' is also an adverb, a conjunction, and an interjection.
There are two basic types of conjunction: co-ordinating (for example 'and') and subordinating (for example 'although'). Co-ordinating conjunctions may be used in pairs to form a correlative conjunction (for example 'either'/'or').
preposition - it gives position conjunctions "JOIN" phrases or clauses (most common and, but, & or)
In conjunction with
A conjunction is a word that grammatically connects two words, phrases, or clauses together. The most common examples are words like βandβ and βbut.β
The conjunction is "and."A conjunction is a connecting word between two nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjective, or adverbs, or between independent clauses. There are only a few common ones and you can see a list at the related link.
Although there are many subordinate conjunctions, the most common are "and", "but", and "or". A subordinate conjunction connects a subordinate clause (a clause that cannot stand alone as a sentence) to a main clause (a complete sentence).
It is a conjunction.