"Mom cooked dinner." is indeed a complete sentence. It contains all parts of a complete sentence.
Yes, it's still a conjunction, and it's grammatically incorrect to begin a sentence with a conjunction. Of course, people do it all the time, but if you're writing a formal paper, don't do it.
I will respect you if you are honest with me is the right grammar of the sentence.
The conjunction in the sentence "She has written, performed, and recorded thirty songs" is "and." It connects the three verbs "written," "performed," and "recorded," indicating that she has accomplished all three actions.
The conjunction is the word 'and 'or 'or' that connects two nouns or pronouns in a compound subject (e.g. He and I, Jim and Joe, he or she).
All we've got for dinner is devilfish stew.
Yes, the word "and" is a conjunction. It is a coordinating conjunction used to join words or independent clauses. It is one of the conjunctions that form the mnemonic FANBOYS, listing all the seven coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so).
The word "and" in the sentence is a conjunction. It connects the three actions—written, performed, and recorded—indicating that she has done all of them. Conjunctions like "and" are used to link words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence.
Yes. Because is a conjunction and can be used at all levels of writing.
The word BUT can "act" as a preposition but is typically a conjunction and possibly an adverb. In the sentence "No one can help him but himself" the phrase "but himself" is actually an elliptical (truncated) form of "but he can help himself" where BUT is a conjunction. Here the word BUT functions like the word except, which is more consistently defined as a preposition.
"Are you sure dinner at your place is all right? We'd not wish to be an imposition."
I will invite all of my sisters-in-law to dinner tomorrow night.