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Here are some common subordinators:
After
Though
Although
Unless
Because
What
Before
When
Even though
Where
If
Which
Since
While
That
Who
Simple Sentences
A simple sentence is just one independent clause by itself. It may have one sub-
ject
and one verb, or several subjects and several verbs.
Rain falls from the sky.
Susie and Karen play basketball on weekends.
I like eating fast food.
She went to the park yesterday.
They were last seen six days ago.
Compound
Sentences
A compound sentence is made up of two (or more) independent clauses. They
may be joined by:
a comma and a coordinating conjunction (FANBOYS*)
I like tea, but I prefer coffee.
a
semi-colon
I like tea; I prefer coffee.
a semi-colon and a conjunctive adverb.
I like tea; however, I prefer coffee.
*FANBOYS is an pneumonic device to help you remember the coordinating conjunctions: For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So.
Sentence Types
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Complex Sentences
A complex sentence has one independent clause and at least one dependent
clause.
The two clauses will be joined by a subordinator (although, because, since,
as) or relative pronoun (who, which, that).
Although it was raining, I walked to work.
In this example, “although” is the subordinator and thus “Although
it was rain-
ing” is a dependent clause.
In a complex sentence, you can put the dependent clause first or second. It
really doesn’t matter; however, you should be careful with the punctuation. If the
dependent clause
goes first in a sentence, it should be followed by a comma. If
the independent clause comes first, no comma is needed:
Although it was raining, I walked to work.
I walked to work although it was raining.
The formula looks like this:
independent clause +
dependent clause
or
dependent clause + comma + independent clause
= complex
sentence
You
can drop the dependent clause, but you cannot drop the independent
one.
I walked to work.
Although it was raining.
The first example is now a
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