No. It may be a pronoun, adjective, or conjunction.
Yes, AND is arguably the most common coordinating conjunction. It is followed in instances of use by the subordinating conjunction THAT.
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conjunction is a part of speech that connects two words.
NO!!! 'and' is a conjunction.. That is it joins two different parts of a sentence together.
Furthermore is an adverb not a conjunction
When used with its relative 'and', both is a correlative conjunction. Both pepperoni and hamburger are popular pizza toppings.
"Since" is a conjunction, and "while" can function as both a conjunction and a noun.
A sentence with two or more subjects joined by a conjunction and that share the same verb is called a compound subject sentence. In this type of sentence, the subjects are connected by a conjunction such as "and" or "or" and the verb is used only once to describe the action of both subjects.
it is an interjection
The word "can" is a modal verb (or a noun), not any kind of conjunction. The term correlative conjunction refers to a PAIR of conjunctions that work separately as a conjunction, such as either/or or neither/nor.
"As if" is a subjunctive conjunction that is used to introduce a hypothetical situation or condition. It is often used to express something that is not true or is unlikely.
'As' is both a preposition and a conjunction.
'And' is a conjunction; 'always' is not, and neither is both together.
Not by itself. But it can be used with and as a compound (correlative) conjunction.(e.g. Both men and women are humans).Both is normally a pronoun or adjective (both saw the ball, both players saw the ball)..
"Because" is a subordinating conjunction. It is used to introduce dependent clauses that provide the reason or cause for the action or event in the main clause.
The conjunction "but" is a coordinating conjunction. It connects independent clauses.