Coordinating conjunctions connect words, phrases, and clauses....There are only 7 of them. An easy way of detecting one...use the word "FANBOYS." Each letter is the first letter of a coordinating conjunction...For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So. Subordinating Conjunctions are more numerous and sometimes a combination of words. They connect a main clause with a subordinate clause. There's a 3rd type of conjunction......Correlative,
No, "wow" is not a conjunction. It's an interjection.
no, it is not.
no many is not a conjunction and or and but are conjunctions
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a preposition, or an adverb when no object is specified.
Both...and is a correlative conjunction. It is used to connect two equal grammatical elements together in a sentence.
No, "neither" is a negative determiner or pronoun used in combination with "nor" to express a negative choice between two options. It is not a correlative conjunction like "either...or" or "both...and."
You need two words for it to be a real correlative conjunction.
Not by itself, where it is either an adjective/determiner (neither boy) or a pronoun (neither is ready). However, it is paired with the conjunction NOR to form the correlative conjunction neither/nor.
The word "can" is a modal verb (or a noun), not any kind of conjunction. The term correlative conjunction refers to a PAIR of conjunctions that work separately as a conjunction, such as either/or or neither/nor.
1. either. . .or2. neither. . .nor 3. both. . .and 4. not only. . .but also
No, it is called a correlative conjunction. These are identifiable because they are separated in the sentence that uses them. Other correlative (paired) conjunctions are either-or and neither-nor.
Not on its own. But it is called a "correlative conjunction" when it is paired with the conjunction "nor" that is located separately in the sentence. Neither can otherwise be an adjective or pronoun.
1. either. . .or2. neither. . .nor 3. both. . .and 4. not only. . .but also
A correlative conjunction
"Either" is a conjunction. More specifically, it is a correlative conjunction.
A correlative conjunction is one or more conjunctions all used in the same way.Common Correlative Conjunctionsboth-andeither-ornot only- but alsoneither-norwhether-orExampleBoth Mom and Dad went grocery shopping.Both-and are the correlative conjunctions