Examples in sentences:
Dos bark and cats mew.
I went to work but my sister stayed at home.
Kinds of Co-coordinating Conjunctions
These are the four kinds of Coordinating Conjunctions:
Cumulative Conjunctions
Adversative Conjunctions
Disjunctive Conjunctions
Illative Conjunctions
Cumulative Conjunctions
These conjunctions simply add one clause to another. Cumulative Conjunctions are also called Copulative Conjunctions.
Examples in sentences:
The cat got up and ran very fast.
He plays guitar as well as he paints pictures.
Adversative Conjunctions
These conjunctions are used to indicate opposition or contrast between two statements or clauses.
Examples in sentences:
He is ill, but he is getting better.
She was all right; only she had a headache.
Disjunctive Conjunctions
Distinctive Conjunctions are used to present two sentences which provide two alternatives. These conjunctions are also known as Alternative Conjunctions.
Examples in sentences:
You must quit smoking, or you will get seriously ill.
Revise your lesson; else you will fail the test.
Illative Conjunctions
Illative conjunctions denote inferences. They make an assumption in one statement based on the condition in the other statement.
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