I don't want anything of yours and I don't want to give up anything of mine (Change into complex)
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Since I don't want anything of yours, I don't want to give anything of mine.
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I don't want anything of yours and I don't want to give up anything of mine. (Compound Sentence)
Since I don't want anything of yours, I don't want to give up anything of mine. (Complex Sentence)
We have three different types of sentences in English grammar. These are Simple sentences, Complex sentences, and Compound sentences.
- A simple sentence is a sentence that has a subject and a predicate. That means a simple sentence has only one clause.
Examples: 1. I am going to school.
2. Children were playing on the ground.
- A complex sentence has one main or independent clause and a subordinate or dependent clause.
Examples: They will inform us after they reach.
- A compound sentence has more than one main clause, these two or more clauses are added to each other with 'and', 'or', etc.
Examples: My mother was sick so she was going to the clinic.
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