CONJUNCTIONS
Conjunctions are words used as joiners.
Different kinds of conjunctions join different kinds of
grammatical structures.
The following are the kinds of conjunctions:
A. COORDINATING
CONJUNCTIONS (FANBOYS)
for, and, nor, but,
or, yet, so
Coordinating conjunctions
join equals to one another:
words to
words, phrases to
phrases, clauses to
clauses.
Coordinating conjunctions usually form looser connections
than other conjunctions do.
Coordinating conjunctions go in between items joined,
not at the beginning or end.
Punctuation with coordinating conjunctions:
When a coordinating conjunction joins two words,
phrases, or subordinate clauses, no comma should be placed before the
conjunction.
A coordinating conjunction joining three or more words,
phrases, or subordinate clauses creates a series and requires commas
between the elements.
A coordinating conjunction joining two independent clauses
creates a compound sentence
and requires a comma before the
coordinating conjunction
either. . .or
|
both. . . and
|
neither. . . nor
|
not only. . . but also
|
These pairs of conjunctions
require equal (parallel) structures after each one.
These conjunctions join independent clauses together.
The following are frequently used conjunctive adverbs:
after all
|
in addition
|
next
|
also
|
incidentally
|
nonetheless
|
as a result
|
indeed
|
on the contrary
|
besides
|
in fact
|
on the other hand
|
consequently
|
in other words
|
otherwise
|
finally
|
instead
|
still
|
for example
|
likewise
|
then
|
furthermore
|
meanwhile
|
therefore
|
hence
|
moreover
|
thus
|
however
|
nevertheless
|
|
Punctuation:
|
Place a semicolon before the
conjunctive adverb and a comma after the conjunctive
adverb
|
These words are commonly used as subordinating conjunctions
after
|
in order (that)
|
Unless
|
Although
|
insofar as
|
Until
|
As
|
in that
|
When
|
as far as
|
lest
|
whenever
|
as soon as
|
no matter how
|
Where
|
as if
|
now that
|
wherever
|
as though
|
once
|
Whether
|
Because
|
provided (that)
|
While
|
Before
|
since
|
Why
|
even if
|
so that
|
|
even though
|
supposing (that)
|
|
How
|
than
|
|
If
|
that
|
|
inasmuch as
|
though
|
|
in case (that)
|
till
|
Subordinating conjunctions also join
two clauses together, but in doing so, they make one clause dependent (or
"subordinate") upon the other.
A subordinating conjunction may appear
at a sentence beginning or between two clauses in a sentence.
A subordinate conjunction usually
provides a tighter connection between clauses than a coordinating conjunctions
does.
Loose:
|
It is raining, so
we have an umbrella.
|
Tight:
|
Because it is
raining, we have an
umbrella.
|
Punctuation Note:
|
When the dependent clause is placed
first in a sentence, use a comma between the two clauses. When the independent clause is placed
first and the dependent
clause second, do not separate
the two clauses with a comma.
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar