Coordinating Conjunctions

Coordinating conjunctions are joiners. They join like with like. For example, a coordinating conjunction can be used to join an adjective with another adjective, a noun with another noun, or a clause with another clause.

The three most common coordinating conjunctions are and, or, and but.

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coordinating conjunctions

Coordinating conjunctions are also known as "coordinate conjunctions." There are seven coordinating conjunctions:

Examples of Coordinating Conjunctions

"Find the Coordinating Conjunctions" Test

Can You Identify Coordinating Conjunctions ?

Why Coordinating Conjunctions Are Important

There are two common questions related to coordinating conjunctions:

(Question 1) Do you put a comma before "and"?

Mostly no but sometimes yes. Unfortunately, the answer to this question isn't short. Here's a summary of the rules:

The Rule for Two Items

There's a very important exception to this rule though. It's important because it's common.

The Exception to the Rule for Two Items

The Rule for Three or More Items

When there are three or more list items, life starts getting a little more complicated because there is no unified position on whether to use a comma with the coordinating conjunction.

Well, actually, be flexibly consistent. If your chosen convention creates ambiguity, break the convention. There's only one 100% rule when it comes to the Oxford Comma: clarity trumps convention.

(Question 2) Can you start a sentence with "And," "Or," or "But"?

Despite what you may have been told at school, you can start a sentence with a conjunction like "And," "Or," and "But."

Bear in mind though that a conjunction at the start of a sentence looks quite striking, so don't do it too often (it gets annoying quickly). However, you should definitely keep this practice in your back pocket to create an impactful start to your sentence. Think of it like this:

"And" is an impactful way of saying In addition
"But" is an impactful way of saying However
"Or" is an impactful way of saying Put another way

So, the real question is not whether you can use a coordinating conjunction to start a sentence but whether "and," "but," and "or" are conjunctive adverbs as well as coordinating conjunctions. And, it seems they are.

Key Points

This page was written by Craig Shrives.