No. Long is usually an adjective and sometimes an adverb.
No, "long" is not a conjunction. It is often used as an adjective to describe the length of something or how much time has passed.
Yes, it is a compound conjunction with two different usages.1) until some indefinite point in the future, e.g. for as long as I live- the following clause has a verb in the present tense2) on the condition that, e.g. as long as you are careful- again, the following clause uses a present-tense verbThe second meaning is a version of the compound conjunction "so long as" which is less used.
In conjunction with
When joining two independent clauses with a conjunction (such as "and," "but," or "or"), use a comma before the conjunction. For example: "She finished her work, and then she went home."
"If" is not a conjunction; it is a subordinating conjunction that introduces a conditional clause.
No, the word "how" is an adverb, a conjunction, and a noun.Example functions:I don't know how long to cook the eggs. (adverb, modifies the adjective 'long')It's a long story how I got this job. (conjunction, joins two parts of the compound sentence)I understand the why but I don't know the how. (noun, direct object of the verb 'know')
Yes, it is a compound conjunction with two different usages.1) until some indefinite point in the future, e.g. for as long as I live- the following clause has a verb in the present tense2) on the condition that, e.g. as long as you are careful- again, the following clause uses a present-tense verbThe second meaning is a version of the compound conjunction "so long as" which is less used.
The conjunction "and" has a short A sound as in band, hand, and land.
In conjunction with
The conjunction "and" has a short A sound as in band, hand, and land.
It is a conjunction.
A conjunction is false only when all statements connected by "and" are individually true, but when taken together, they form a false statement. For example, the conjunction "It is raining and the sun is shining" would be false because it's impossible for it to rain and for the sun to be shining at the same time.
That's correct, "is not" is a negation verb phrase rather than a conjunction. Conjunctions are used to connect words, phrases, or clauses, such as "and," "but," or "or."
"But" is a coordinating conjunction that indicates a contrast or exception between two clauses or sentences. It is used to connect ideas that are opposite or different in some way.
No, "wow" is not a conjunction. It's an interjection.
No, "had" is not a conjunction. It is a past tense verb indicating an action that took place in the past. Conjunctions are words that connect or join phrases, clauses, or sentences.
No, the word "how" is an adverb, a conjunction, and a noun.Example functions:I don't know how long to cook the eggs. (adverb, modifies the adjective 'long')It's a long story how I got this job. (conjunction, joins two parts of the compound sentence)I understand the why but I don't know the how. (noun, direct object of the verb 'know')
no better is not a conjunction