Compound
Sentences with Coordinating Conjunctions
(FANBOYS)
A
compound sentence contains two separate subject
and verb
pairs. You can combine two simple sentences together with a
comma and
a
coordinating conjunction
to make one compound sentence. Here are some examples:
F
– for I
drank
some water,
for I
was
thirsty.
She
put
on a sweater,
for it
was cold
outside.
*for means the exact same thing as because. The only difference is that when you use for to join two sentences together into one compound sentence, you need to use a comma before it. When you use because to join to sentences, you don’t use a comma before it.
A
– and He
was
tired,
and he
had
a headache.
N
– nor She
doesn’t
drink milk,
nor does
she
eat
butter.
I
can’t
whistle,
nor can
I sing.
He
didn’t
study
last night,
nor did
he
read
his book.
They
were not
wearing jackets,
nor were
they
carrying
umbrellas.
*nor means “also not”. Nor requires unusual grammar. The first sentence will contain a negative verb. The second sentence will contain what looks like an interrogative affirmative verb form. An auxiliary verb (do/does/did, is/am/are/was/were), modal verb (can/could/will/would/may/might/must/should), or be main verb (is/am/are/was/were) comes after nor and before the subject, and then the main verb comes after the subject.
B
– but Tom
studied a
lot, but
he
didn’t pass the test.
O
– or He
can
buy the book,
or he
can
borrow it from the
library.
Y
– yet Tom
studied
a lot,
yet
he didn’t
pass the test.
*yet means the same thing as but.
S
– so Maria
was
thirsty,
so she
drank
some water.
It
was cold
outside,
so she
put
on a sweater.
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