coordinating conjunction
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Definition:
A conjunction
that joins two similarly constructed and/or syntactically
equal words or phrases or clauses within a sentence.
The coordinating conjunctions are and,
but, for, nor, or, so, yet. Compare with Subordinating Conjunction.
See also:
- Sentence-Imitation Exercise: Compound Sentences
- Coordination
- Coordinating Words, Phrases, and Clauses
- Coordination in O'Neill's Netherland
- Paired Construction
- Practice in Identifying Coordinating and Correlative Conjunctions
- Syndeton
Examples:
- "I know not with what
weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be
fought with sticks and stones."
(Albert Einstein)
- "My wife Mary and I
have been married for 47 years and not once have we had an argument
serious enough to consider divorce; murder, yes, but divorce,
never."
(Jack Benny)
- "She must have been tired,
for she fell asleep the moment she inclined her head."
(Nikos Kazantzakis, Report to Greco, 1965)
- "Man is the only animal
that laughs and weeps, for he is the only animal that is
struck with the difference between what things are, and what they
might have been."
(William Hazlitt)
- "In no other city does
life seem such a perpetual balancing of debits and credits, of
evils and virtues, as it does in New York. No other city seems so
charming yet so crude, so civilized yet so uncouth."
(Joseph Epstein, "You Take Manhattan," 1983)
- "She does not come here to
worship or to pray, but she has a sense of rightness and
ritual about being here, a sense of duty fulfilled, of some unstated
covenant's renewal."
(Stephen King, Rose Madder, 1995)
- "I didn't know, nor
did any of my family seem to know, that this medicinal leaf my grandma
burned was marijuana."
(E.L. Doctorow, World's Fair, 1985)
- "The mind plays tricks on
you. You play tricks back! It's like you're unraveling a big cable-knit
sweater that someone keeps knitting and knitting and
knitting and knitting and knitting and
knitting."
(Pee Wee in Pee-wee's Big Adventure, 1985)
- "It's tough to stay
married. My wife kisses the dog on the lips, yet she won't drink
from my glass."
(Rodney Dangerfield)
- "You have the American
dream! The American dream is to be born in the gutter and have
nothing. Then to rise and have all the money in the world, and
stick it in your ears and go 'PLBTLBTLBLTLBTLBLT!' That's a pretty
good dream."
(Eddie Izzard)
- "They were not cordial to
Negro patronage, unless you were a celebrity like Bojangles. So
Harlem Negroes did not like the Cotton Club and never appreciated its Jim
Crow policy in the very heart of their dark community. Nor did
ordinary Negroes like the growing influx of whites toward Harlem after
sundown . . .."
(Langston Hughes, The Big Sea, 1940)
- "Every Englishman must
have a hobby. Some like to collect the stamp, some like to make the jam, but
the most fun is to kill a little animal with a shotgun or rip them
up with wild dog."
(Sacha Baron Cohen as Borat)
- Use of a Coordinating
Conjunction at the Beginning of a Sentence
And did those feet in ancient time
Walk upon England’s mountains green?
And was the holy Lamb of God,
On England's pleasant pastures seen?
And did the Countenance Divine,
Shine forth upon our clouded hills?
And was Jerusalem builded here,
Among these dark Satanic Mills?
(William Blake, "Jerusalem." Preface to Milton, 1804-1810)
"And at the beginning of a sentence? During the 19th century, some schoolteachers took against the practice of beginning a sentence with a word like butorand, presumably because they noticed the way young children often overused them in their writing. But instead of gently weaning the children away from overuse, they banned the usage altogether! Generations of children were taught they should 'never' begin a sentence with a conjunction. Some still are.
"There was never any authority behind this condemnation. It isn't one of the rules laid down by the first prescriptive grammarians. Indeed, one of those grammarians, Bishop Lowth, uses dozens of examples of sentences beginning with and. And in the 20th century, Henry Fowler, in his famous Dictionary of Modern English Usage, went so far as to call it a 'superstition.' He was right. There are sentences starting with And that date back to Anglo-Saxon times."
(David Crystal, The Story of English in 100 Words. St. Martin's Press, 2012)