No, it is not a conjunction. The word again is an adverb, of time and frequency, indicating a repetition of an event or status. e.g. He answered the same question again.
The correct and commonly accepted phrase is “in conjunction with.” “In conjunction to” is generally considered incorrect in standard English.
Yes, it is a subordinating conjunction. It connects a restrictive clause.
There is no conjunction of will not.Maybe you mean contraction.If you do then won't is the contraction
Yes, it is a compound conjunction with two different usages.1) until some indefinite point in the future, e.g. for as long as I live- the following clause has a verb in the present tense2) on the condition that, e.g. as long as you are careful- again, the following clause uses a present-tense verbThe second meaning is a version of the compound conjunction "so long as" which is less used.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a contraction. It combines the pronoun YOU and the verb ARE.
The word again cannot be used alone as a conjunction. It is an adverb.
The correct and commonly accepted phrase is “in conjunction with.” “In conjunction to” is generally considered incorrect in standard English.
Jack and Jill went up the hill. Jack or Jill fell down again.
Yes, it is a subordinating conjunction. It connects a restrictive clause.
No, "wow" is not a conjunction. It's an interjection.
It is a conjunction.
There is no conjunction of will not.Maybe you mean contraction.If you do then won't is the contraction
The word are is not a conjunction. It is a verb.
No, it is not a conjunction. The word be is a verb.
no better is not a conjunction
Yes, it is a compound conjunction with two different usages.1) until some indefinite point in the future, e.g. for as long as I live- the following clause has a verb in the present tense2) on the condition that, e.g. as long as you are careful- again, the following clause uses a present-tense verbThe second meaning is a version of the compound conjunction "so long as" which is less used.
It can be a conjunction, as well as an adverb. As a subordinating conjunction, it connects restrictive dependent clauses.