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Example sentences for "conjunctions"

Lexicographically close words:
conjuges; conjugial; conjugio; conjunct; conjunction; conjunctiva; conjunctivae; conjunctival; conjunctive; conjunctivitis
  1. Conjunctions usually connect verbs in the same mode or tense.

  2. Conjunctions that connect particular words, generally join similar parts of speech in a common dependence on some other term.

  3. What is remarked of two or more conjunctions coming together?

  4. To the supplying of useless words, if we admit the principle, there may be no end; and the notion that conjunctions join sentences only, opens a wide door for it.

  5. What says Exception 4th to Rule 4th of Conjunctions Understood?

  6. Some conjunctions have their correspondent conjunctions belonging to them: so that, in the subsequent member of the sentence the latter answers to the former.

  7. Conjunctions connect words or sentences to each other.

  8. Use the comma after each word of a series of words that all have the same grammatical relation to the rest of the sentence, unless conjunctions are used between all of those words.

  9. There are certain conjunctions, and also certain pairs of conjunctions that frequently cause trouble.

  10. Other conjunctions may be used, or the verb may precede the subject.

  11. It ought also to be noted that in the preceding year there were three conjunctions of the planets Jupiter and Saturn, at the end of May and October, and at the beginning of December.

  12. Thus we see, that the conjunctions will always occur in three given points of the orbit of each planet situate at angular distances of 120° from each other.

  13. Time as referred to in the conjunctions when and then is not gestured.

  14. Select the conjunctions in the following sentences, and tell what each connects:— 1.

  15. Parse the conjunctions in the following sentences:— 1.

  16. Certain adverbs and conjunctions are correlative (that is, having a mutual relation) to one another.

  17. Point out in the following examples conjunctions that connect sentences or parts of a sentence of equal rank, and those that connect sentences that are not of equal rank:— 1.

  18. Prepositions, articles, and conjunctions are not capitalized; as, The Call of the Wild.

  19. Especial care must be taken not to confuse coördinate conjunctions and conjunctive adverbs.

  20. Prepositions join their objects to other words in the sentence; conjunctions join words, phrases, or clauses.

  21. Conjunctions connect nouns and pronouns in the same case.

  22. Repeat some conjunctions with their corresponding conjunctions.

  23. From what parts of speech are prepositions and conjunctions derived?

  24. In what respect do conjunctions and prepositions agree in their nature?

  25. Conjunctions are those parts of language, which, by joining sentences in different ways, mark the connexions and various dependances of human thought.

  26. Conjunctions are divided into two sorts, the Copulative and Disjunctive.

  27. Conjunctions implying contingency or doubt, require the subjunctive mood after them; as, "If he study, he will improve.

  28. Some conjunctions are followed by corresponding conjunctions, so that, in the subsequent member of the sentence, the latter answers to the former; as, 1.

  29. The homogeneity of qualitative relationships, in the pre-thought material, gives the tools or instruments by which thought is enabled successfully to tackle the heterogeneity of collocations and conjunctions also found in the same material!

  30. For they assumed the shapes of animals common unto all eyes; and by their conjunctions and compositions were able to communicate their conceptions, unto any that co-apprehended the Syntaxis of their Natures.

  31. To justify this pretension, epistemology has first to transform all our conjunctions into static objects, and this, I submit, is an absolutely arbitrary act.

  32. If, on the other hand, we had such an Absolute, not one of our opponents' theories of knowledge could remain standing any better than ours could; for the distinctions as well as the conjunctions of experience would impartially fall its prey.

  33. I have to conclude that its dialectic has not invalidated in the least degree the usual conjunctions by which the world, as experienced, hangs so variously together.

  34. In a world where both the terms and their distinctions are affairs of experience, conjunctions that are experienced must be at least as real as anything else.

  35. Only such other things as led to these by satisfactory conjunctions would be 'true.

  36. The conjunctions are as primordial elements of 'fact' as are the distinctions and disjunctions.

  37. It is just because so many of the conjunctions of experience seem so external that a philosophy of pure experience must tend to pluralism in its ontology.

  38. It insists on taking conjunctions at their 'face-value,' just as they come.

  39. V The first duty of radical empiricism, taking given conjunctions at their face-value, is to class some of them as more intimate and some as more external.

  40. While we live in such conjunctions our state is one of transition in the most literal sense.

  41. The world is one,' therefore, just so far as we experience it to be concatenated, one by as many definite conjunctions as appear.

  42. Form the habit of memorizing the Latin subordinate conjunctions as you meet them, and of noting carefully the mood of the verb in the clauses which they introduce.

  43. Therefore the figure asyndeton, whereby conjunctions are omitted, is highly commended by writers of rhetoric.

  44. But there be some who think that conjunctions do not make anything one, but that this kind of speech is merely an enumeration, as when magistrates or days are reckoned in order.

  45. Nor do conjunctions join all, but only such as are not spoken simply; unless you will make a cord part of the burthen, glue a part of a book, or distribution of money part of the government.

  46. Of this sort is Asyndeton when the conjunctions uniting sentences are removed.

  47. It is highly important to remember that conjunctions connect propositions.

  48. The third point to determine in the syntax of conjunctions is the certainty or uncertainty in the mind of the speaker as to the facts expressed by the propositions which they serve to connect.

  49. The second point in the syntax of conjunctions is the fact of their great convertibility.

  50. For the practice of language, they are not only adverbs or conjunctions, but they are adverbs or conjunctions exclusively.

  51. Between certain relative pronouns and those particular conjunctions that govern a subjunctive mood there is also a point of connection.

  52. Most conjunctions have been developed out of some other part of speech.

  53. Between the relative pronouns and conjunctions in general there is this point of connection,--both join propositions.

  54. From the fact of the great convertibility of conjunctions it is often necessary to determine whether a word be a conjunction or not.

  55. What applies to if applies to other conjunctions as well.

  56. The government of mood is the only form of government of which conjunctions are capable.

  57. The absolute conjunctions in the English language are and, or, but, if.

  58. Conditional conjunctions are of two sorts:-- 1.

  59. If the stars have no power over the fortunes of mankind, it is implied in the very terms, that the conjunctions or oppositions of different stars can have no such power.

  60. There are sequences, as uniform in past experience as any others whatever, which yet we do not regard as cases of causation, but as conjunctions in some sort accidental.

  61. Some conjunctions govern the indicative; some the subjunctive mood.

  62. But {067}our conjunctions are used to connect words and sentences, and have nothing to do with the joining of hands.

  63. Give some of the conjunctions and the conjunctive adverbs of each class.

  64. Study the lists above, and point out all the connectives in Lessons 80 and 81, telling which are relative pronouns, which are conjunctions proper, and which are conjunctive adverbs.

  65. Words or phrases connected by conjunctions are separated from each other by the comma unless all the conjunctions are expressed.

  66. Some conjunctions and conjunctive adverbs may stand in correlation with other words.

  67. Contract these sentences by omitting the repeated modifiers and prepositions, and all the conjunctions except the last:-- 1.

  68. The existence of such a connection appears to be involved in the very fact of suggestion, and may be said to be the organic result of frequent conjunctions of the two parts of the nervous operation in our past history.

  69. Thus, illusory perception and expectation are plainly a hasty transition of mind from old to new, from past to present, conjunctions of experience.


  70. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "conjunctions" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.