|
Canada-0-INSECTICIDES 公司名錄
|
公司新聞:
- Independent and Dependent Clauses - Purdue OWL®
This handout defines dependent and independent clauses and explores how they are treated in standard usage
- Coordinating Conjunctions with Examples - AceEnglishGrammar
Coordinating conjunctions helps create compound sentences by joining independent clauses An independent clause is a complete sentence that can stand alone, and when connected by a coordinating conjunction, they form a compound sentence
- Coordinating Conjunctions: Definition, Usage, and Examples
Coordinating conjunctions connect elements of equal grammatical rank (words, phrases, or independent clauses), while subordinating conjunctions introduce dependent clauses and connect them to independent clauses
- Subordination and Coordination: Definition and Examples
Subordination allows you to join a dependent clause to an independent one, while coordination enables you to join two independent clauses This article is part of our free online Grammar Book
- Coordinating Conjunctions: Explanation and Examples
Use a comma before a coordinating conjunction that joins two independent clauses You can start a sentence with a coordinating conjunction, and you can put a comma after it if you want a pause
- Using Coordinating Conjunctions – The Writing Center – UW–Madison
When a coordinating conjunction joins two independent clauses, a comma is used before the coordinating conjunction (unless the two independent clauses are very short) Conjunctions that are not followed by non-essential elements should never be followed by commas
- Independent and Dependent Clauses: Rules and Examples
Learn the rules of independent and dependent clauses, how to connect them in a sentence, and common mistakes to avoid, with examples
- Coordinating Conjunctions: Definition, Examples, Exercises
Tip #2: Make sure you know the difference between an independent clause and a dependent (subordinate) clause To use coordinating conjunctions, you need to have a solid understanding of what an independent clause is
- Conjunctions - Guide to Grammar
A Subordinating Conjunction (sometimes called a dependent word or subordinator) comes at the beginning of a Subordinate (or Dependent) Clause and establishes the relationship between the dependent clause and the rest of the sentence
- To Comma or Not To Comma: How To Join Independent and Dependent Clauses . . .
In short, independent clauses can stand alone, and dependent clauses cannot Both have a subject-verb pair (without that pair, it’d be just a phrase—not a clause at all), but dependent clauses have a subordinating conjunction or a relative pronoun that makes them dependent on the independent clause Here’s an independent clause:
|
|