English, asked by drupadsinghsaiyam038, 7 months ago

write a detailed note on coordinate clause ​

Answers

Answered by tarunamalik30
3

Answer:

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Explanation:

Coordinate Clause

In English grammar, a coordinate clause is a clause (i.e., a word group containing a subject and predicate) that is introduced by one of the coordinating conjunctions--most commonly and or but. A compound sentence is made up of one or more coordinate clauses joined to the main clause.

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Answered by sgadiya44
2

Answer:

In English grammar, a coordinate clause is a clause that is introduced by one of the coordinating conjunctions-most commonly and or but. A compound sentence is made up of one or more coordinate clauses joined to the main clause. The rhetorical term for a coordinate construction is parataxis.

Examples

1. "It was apple-blossom time, and the days were getting warmer."

2. "I wasn't a fan of most vegetables, but I didn't mind peas."

3. "They ate the dessert, and neither one mentioned the fact that it was slightly burned."

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