Coordinating Conjunctions
There are only seven of these.
Learn to diagram coordinating conjunctions.
Example: cookies and milk
Here they are:
for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so
You can remember them using the acronym FANBOYS.
Subordinating Conjunctions
There are many subordinating conjunctions. This list does not include all of them.
Learn to diagram subordinating conjunctions.
Example: I will eat broccoli after I eat this cookie.
A: after, although, as, as if, as long as, as much as, as soon as, as though
B: because, before, by the time
E: even if, even though
I: if, in order that, in case
L: lest
O: once, only if
P: provided that
S: since, so that
T: than, that, though, till
U: unless, until
W: when, whenever, where, wherever, while
Correlative Conjunctions
These are always used in pairs.
Example: This cookie contains neither chocolate nor nuts.
both... and
either... or
neither... nor
not only... but also
whether... or
Conjunctions are words that connect words, phrases, or clauses within a sentence. Examples include "and," "but," "or," "nor," "for," "so," and "yet." They are used to show relationships between different parts of a sentence.
list of employees or list employee
List is a noun (a list) and a verb (to list).
on the list
federal list
a list of an animal is a list about animals by me
Routing list list and delegated authorities list
market list is market list.......thank you
A list within a list (or a list within another nested list).A list contains entries, which can be anything.Suppose those entries were lists themselves. Then they would be nested lists.
"ON the list" is correct. We use "on" when referring to something being included on a list, like being one of the items listed.
The verb forms are list, lists, listing, and listed. List can be a verb or a noun. The new book list was posted today. - noun They list everything in the shop. - verb
A-list