someone please answer this man!
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
and but - the sentence does not make sense, if YOU were late why did "they" rather than "I" miss the test.
someone please answer this man!
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
and but - the sentence does not make sense, if YOU were late why did "they" rather than "I" miss the test.
The grammatical conjunction in this sentence is and. A conjunction is used to connect phrases, sentences, clauses, or words. A conjunction is typically one word but there are a few short phrases that also serve as conjunctions.
No, the word 'however' is not a noun; the word 'however' is an adverb and a conjunction. Examples:adverb: However late it gets, call me when you get there.conjunction: He was late for class, however he had completed his homework.
Perhaps if they bought it after you defaulted or had a history of late or missed payments.Perhaps if they bought it after you defaulted or had a history of late or missed payments.Perhaps if they bought it after you defaulted or had a history of late or missed payments.Perhaps if they bought it after you defaulted or had a history of late or missed payments.
You will be late to your class. You will be late getting to your class.
andyou will be late in my class
Yes, you can use "for" as a conjunction to indicate a reason or explanation, such as "For we were running late, we missed the train." In this example, "for" is functioning as a conjunction to connect the reason (running late) to the consequence (missing the train).