No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb meaning "right away."
The conjunction "consequently" in the sentence "you will leave immediately; consequently, you will arrive on time" is a conjunctive adverb. It connects two independent clauses, indicating a cause-and-effect relationship between leaving immediately and arriving on time. This type of conjunction often provides clarification or additional information about the preceding clause.
"At once" can function as both an adverb and a conjunction in a sentence. As an adverb, it typically means "simultaneously" or "immediately." As a conjunction, it can signal a contrast or unexpected result.
The teacher explained the lesson as if she expected everyone to understand it immediately.
Yes, "as soon as" is a subordinating conjunction. It is used to introduce a subordinate clause and indicates that the action in the subordinate clause happens immediately after the action in the main clause. For example, "I will leave as soon as the meeting ends."
I believe that the phrase "as soon as" functions as a subordinate conjunction, much as "when" does. E.g., As soon as he comes,.... vs. When he comes,...
The statement is bi-conditional. The "if and only if" should have tipped you off immediately.
In conjunction with
"As soon as" is a conjunction that shows something that happens immediately (that is, at the moment another action is completed; in this case, as soon as you arrive, _____ will take place).
no. It would very unusual to place an exclamation mark immediately after a conjunction. The reason is that conjunctions do not occur at the end of sentence as do exclamation marks.
Generally a comma does not go immediately before or after a conjunction, which is a joining of ideas. You may put a comma before one if it introduces an independent clause, especially if there would normally be a pause in speech. For example: We arrived after midnight, and by then the party had been over for an hour.
It is a conjunction.
No, "wow" is not a conjunction. It's an interjection.