What is the difference between correlative conjunction and compound conjunction?
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:Remember that a conjunction is a word that joins other words, phrases or clauses together. One type of conjunction is the coordinating conjunction, which joins two or more elements of equal importance in a sentence. ... Common correlative conjunction pairs include not only/but also, either/or, neither/nor and both/and.
Step-by-step explanation:
Adeniranomo1974:
Nice one thanks
Answered by
1
Correlative Conjunction :
=======================
They get their name from the fact that they work together (co-) and relate one sentence element to another. These type of conjunctions include the pair such as " either/or " , " neither/nor ", " not only/but also " etc.
For example - I want either the pen or the book.
Compound Conjunction :
========================
A compound conjunction may have two or three parts and they always go together. They are different from correlatives which are conjunction used only in pair.
For example - as if, even etc. Ram walks as if he were lame.
I hope it will help you. Thank you.
Plzz mark me as brainliest.
=======================
They get their name from the fact that they work together (co-) and relate one sentence element to another. These type of conjunctions include the pair such as " either/or " , " neither/nor ", " not only/but also " etc.
For example - I want either the pen or the book.
Compound Conjunction :
========================
A compound conjunction may have two or three parts and they always go together. They are different from correlatives which are conjunction used only in pair.
For example - as if, even etc. Ram walks as if he were lame.
I hope it will help you. Thank you.
Plzz mark me as brainliest.
Similar questions