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17 June, 02:15

Subordinating conjunctions are transitions words that signal:

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  1. 17 June, 05:06
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    Subordinating conjunctions are transition words that signal the beginning of a subordinating clause. (A subordinate clause is a clause that depends on another clause and cannot stand alone.)

    Examples of subordinating conjunctions are:

    because, when, as, as long as, unless, until, after, before, although, provided that, etc.

    There are 3 types of conjunctions:

    subordinating conjunctions: connect an independent/main clause to a dependent/subordinating clause coordinating conjunctions: connect two clauses of the same type correlative conjunctions: connect two clauses of the same type but always come in pairs, for example: both ... and, neither ... nor, etc.)

    The subordinating conjuctions can introduce:

    a noun clause (the subordinating clause acts as a noun) an adjective clause (the subordinating clause acts as an adjective, it describes a noun) an adverb clause (the subordinating clause works as an adverb)
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