no there is not
An adjective is used to bring together two independent clauses that are closely related in thought, in a single sentence. A conjunctive adverb is an adverb that does the same thing.
No its not a conjunctive adverb. But is used as coordinate conjunction. conjunctive adverbs are sentence connectors which you put semicolon (;) before it and comma after it (,).
No, they are two different related parts of speech. A conjunction (noun) refers to a part of speech, where a word may be able to serve as more than one part of speech. It also refers to a celestial occurrence in astronomy. The word conjunctive is an adjective, which can refer to conjunctions is several senses. The confusion may arise where the noun conjunction is used as a noun adjunct, rather than the adjective conjunctive.
from Latin Adventura (a thing about to happen, or what must happen) from Adventurus the future participle of Advenire (to come about) from Ad (to) and Venire (to come) The original meaning in Latin was 'to arrive'
adjectives
A conjunctive is a connecting word used to join clauses or sentences. For example, "I wanted to go to the park, but it started raining" uses "but" as a conjunctive to connect the two ideas. It helps create flow and coherence in writing.
refers
A conjunctive pronoun is a word that does the work of both a conjunction and a pronoun. Examples:I like the person who I am now.The car that hit the sign was blue.
Te amo, marite future.
dx
No, "slowly" is an adverb that modifies verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. It is not a conjunctive adverb, which are adverbs that connect independent clauses.
No, although is a subordinating conjunction. For the difference between conjunctions and adverbs, see Conjunctive adverbs on linguapress.com English grammar online