compound words
Words joined with a conjunction are typically called compound words or phrases. These words are made by combining two or more individual words to create a new word or expression.
Compound sentences are joined by a coordinating conjunction (such as and, but, or, so), a semicolon, or a conjunctive adverb (such as however, therefore).
A sentence with two or more subjects joined by a conjunction and that share the same verb is called a compound subject sentence. In this type of sentence, the subjects are connected by a conjunction such as "and" or "or" and the verb is used only once to describe the action of both subjects.
A comma can be placed before the conjunction to separate the two independent clauses. For example: "I went to the store, and I bought some groceries."
The part of speech that connects words and sentences is called a conjunction.
No, "intelligently" is an adverb, not a conjunction. Conjunctions are words that connect words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence.
A comma can be placed before the conjunction to separate the two independent clauses. For example: "I went to the store, and I bought some groceries."
Two subjects joined by a conjunction form a compound subject. This assumes, of course, that the two subjects and the conjunction are part of a sentence that includes a verb.
Compound sentences are joined by a coordinating conjunction (such as and, but, or, so), a semicolon, or a conjunctive adverb (such as however, therefore).
In linguistics, words like why, where, when and how are usually called wh-words. The words what, which, who, whom, and whose are a subtype of wh-words called interrogative pronouns.
A sentence in which two or more independent clauses are not properly joined by a semicolon or conjunction. Also called run-on sentence.
a conjunction
When two independent clauses are joined together correctly, they form a compound sentence. This means that the clauses are able to stand alone as separate sentences but are joined by a coordinating conjunction (like "and," "but," or "or") or a semicolon.
The part of speech that connects words and sentences is called a conjunction.
2 or more independant clauses joined by a conjunction
A conjunction is not a figure of speech. Conjunctions are a class of words like verbs, nouns etc. They are commonly called joining 'words' their job is to link together two parts of a sentence.The sun shone and everybody felt happy. The conjunction is and.
because the word conjunction means "joined with" so you need to know what you are joining with first.
The part of speech that consists of words that link words, phrases, or clauses is called a conjunction. Conjunctions are used to connect words or group of words in a sentence to establish a relationship between them. Examples include "and," "but," "or," and "because."