English, asked by aditibansal04340, 1 month ago

Join the following sentences to make one complete sentence without using and, but
or so.
1.
The President may speak in English. He may speak in Hindi.
2.
The problem is very difficult. I can't solve it.
3. I am working hard. I want to succeed in life.
4.
She was very excited. She couldn't speak to him.​

Answers

Answered by Nereida
79

Answer:

1. The President may speak in English. He may speak in Hindi.

⇒ The President may either speak in English or Hindi.

2. The problem is very difficult. I can't solve it.

⇒ Since problem is very difficult, I can't solve it.

3. I am working hard. I want to succeed in life.

⇒ I am working hard because I want to succeed in life.

4. She was very excited. She couldn't speak to him.

⇒ She was very excited but she couldn't speak to him.

Extra Information:

  • Conjunctions -

Conjunctions are words which helps to join phrases or sentences.

The three types of Conjunctions :

  1. Coordinating conjunctions are words which join phrases or words which are similar in nature.
  2. Subordinating conjunctions are words which joins an independent clause with a subordinate clause.
  3. Correlative conjunctions are words which join phrases and words that are similar in form and structure.
Answered by Anonymous
116

Answer:

Join the following sentences to make one complete sentence without using and, but or so.

1) The President may speak in English. He may speak in Hindi.

➦ The President may speak in English or in Hindi.

2) The problem is very difficult. I can't solve it.

➦ The problem is very difficult that I can't solve it.

3) I am working hard. I want to succeed in life.

➦ I am working hard because I want succeed in life.

4) She was very excited. She couldn't speak to him.

➦ She was very excited that she couldn't speak to him.

EXTRA INFORMATION :-

Conjunction :

  • Conjunction is a part of speech that connects word, sentences, phrases and clauses.

Types Of Conjunction :

  • Coordinating Conjunction
  • Correlative Conjunction
  • Subordinating Conjunction
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