No, they are two different related parts of speech.
A conjunction (noun) refers to a part of speech, where a word may be able to serve as more than one part of speech. It also refers to a celestial occurrence in astronomy.
The word conjunctive is an adjective, which can refer to conjunctions is several senses. The confusion may arise where the noun conjunction is used as a noun adjunct, rather than the adjective conjunctive.
No, it is a conjunction (the negative equivalent of OR). As a conjunctive pair, it is used with neither in the same way that or is used with either.
Compound sentences are joined by a coordinating conjunction (such as and, but, or, so), a semicolon, or a conjunctive adverb (such as however, therefore).
"therefore" is a conjunctive adverb. It is used to show contrast, consequence, or inference between two clauses or sentences.
The word further is not a conjunction. It may be a verb, adjective, or adverb. As an adverb, it may function as what is called a conjunctive adverb, to connect independent clauses (along with a semicolon) in the same way as the adverb furthermore.Example:The British were astounded by the development; further, they feared appearing inferior to the German scientists.
However is an adverb. But it can function as a conjunctive adverb when a conjunction is replaced by a semicolon.
No its not a conjunctive adverb. But is used as coordinate conjunction. conjunctive adverbs are sentence connectors which you put semicolon (;) before it and comma after it (,).
"Consequently" is a conjunctive adverb.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb, a conjunctive adverb, used along with a semicolon to connect clauses (instead of a conjunction).
No, it is a conjunction (the negative equivalent of OR). As a conjunctive pair, it is used with neither in the same way that or is used with either.
A conjunctive pronoun is a word that does the work of both a conjunction and a pronoun. Examples:I like the person who I am now.The car that hit the sign was blue.
A correlative conjunction is a pair of conjunctions that are placed at separate points in the sentence to join words or word groups that are used in the same way.Examples:both...andnot only...but alsoeither...orneither...norwhether...or*Also Known As: paired coordinator, conjunctive pair
No, although is a subordinating conjunction. For the difference between conjunctions and adverbs, see Conjunctive adverbs on linguapress.com English grammar online
A conjunctive pronoun is a word that does the work of both a conjunction and a pronoun. Examples:I like the person who I am now.The car that hit the sign was blue.
no .There is no such word as Its . . . use of the apostrophe (') in the word it's, is what makes this word a conjunction; it joins the words it and is,thereby giving you the conjunctive word, it's . . . . .meaning "it is."
no there is not
Compound sentences are joined by a coordinating conjunction (such as and, but, or, so), a semicolon, or a conjunctive adverb (such as however, therefore).
An adjective is used to bring together two independent clauses that are closely related in thought, in a single sentence. A conjunctive adverb is an adverb that does the same thing.