A conjunction is a word that links two nouns (boys and girls; cake and ice cream) or connects two independent clauses: The new coach has an excellent reputation and I expect him to help the team win many games. So, a conjunction sentence is probably one that contains a conjunction: some common conjunctions are "and," "or" and "but." Here's another example: The students can take their quiz today, or they can take it tomorrow.
The coordinating conjunction in the sentence is "and."
The conjunction in this sentence is "or."
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
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.
The word "and" is a conjunction in the given sentence.
An entire sentence can't be a conjunction, and there is no conjunction in that sentence.
The coordinating conjunction in the sentence is "and."
The conjunction in this sentence is "or."
complex sentence: 1 sentence + FANBOY (conjunction) + fragment compound sentence: 1 sentence , comma + FANBOY (conjunction) + 1 sentence
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
I will accompany you if you desire. If is the conjunction in this sentence.
AND is the conjunction in the sentence since it binds two sentences together.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
The conjunction "or" is a coordinating conjunction.
The conjunction is "but."
'This cereal is delicious with fruit or berries'. The conjunction in this sentence is the word 'with'.
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.