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The conjunction "yet" is being used as an adversative conjunction in the sentence. It shows a contrast or contradiction between arriving early and not finding a seat.
Coordinating conjunction.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
Where may be used as a noun, adverb, or conjunction. "Where are you from?" (noun) "Where is the telephone?" (adverb) "I decide to go where no one could find me." (conjunction)
they arrived because of the mamoths and had to fallow them to find food and or shelter for what they eat was the wooly mammoths
I find it difficult to figure out what your question means. If you are asking if the sentences: "She wanted to leave early or She wanted to stay overnight?" contain dependent clause, the answer is NO. "She wanted to leave early." and "She wanted to stay overnight." are both independent clauses. the OR used to connect the two clauses is a coordinate conjunction. you can tell if the other clause is a dependent clause if the conjunction used is a subordinating conjunction.
the met the Indians or Native American in the north east
Whatever they could find, I guess.
In the American colonies during the 17th and 18th centuries, English and African indentured servants could be found working together on plantations, particularly in the Southern colonies like Virginia and Maryland. They were both bound to work for a set period of time in exchange for passage to the colonies or other benefits.
What they could find and or hunt, they were hunter gatherers.
The Ocean...