No, "However" is not a subordinator. It is a coordinator like "on the other hand"
A subordinator usually comes before the comma in a complex sentence. Subordinators such as because, if, when, although typically introduce dependent clauses that come before or after the main clause in a sentence.
with the word however However you get somewhere does not matter, as long as you arrive on time.
A semicolon or a comma can follow the word "however" in a sentence.
If the word 'however' is in the sentence, commas should be placed on both sides. Eg: Blahblahblah, however, blahblahblah. If,however, the word 'however' opens the sentence, the comma should only be placed after the word. Eg: However, blahblahblah.
No, a comma doesn't always follow "however." It depends on the structure of the sentence and how "however" is being used. If "however" appears at the beginning of a sentence, it is typically followed by a comma.
It is no kind of conjunction. The word during is a preposition.
relative pronoun: that, who, which subordinator: because,since, after, although or when
No, "well" is not a subordinator. It is an adverb commonly used to modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs in a sentence. Subordinators are words or phrases that introduce dependent clauses in complex sentences.
A subordinator usually comes before the comma in a complex sentence. Subordinators such as because, if, when, although typically introduce dependent clauses that come before or after the main clause in a sentence.
Also is an adverb, although it can function as a conjunctive adverb in elliptical (omission) constructions such as "He was mean, also ugly" (He was mean and also ugly. Most dictionaries consider also a conjunction here, for what it's worth.)
The difference between a compound sentence and a complex sentence is that a compound sentence has two independent clauses, connected by a Coordinator. A complex sentence on contains one independent clause. A complex sentence also always contains a subordinator.
A compound sentence contains two independent clauses joined by a coordinator, coordinators are always preceded by a comma. A complex sentence has an independent clause joined by one or more dependent clauses. A complex sentence always has a subordinator such as because, since, after, although, or when or a relative pronoun such as that, who, or which.
zooligist ... or however you spell it zooligist ... or however you spell it zooligist ... or however you spell it zooligist ... or however you spell it zooligist ... or however you spell it zooligist ... or however you spell it
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.
however in Spanish is como se a
No the word however is not a noun. It is an adverb.
with the word however However you get somewhere does not matter, as long as you arrive on time.