Conjunctions connect ideas. They help you expand sentences and improve fluency. There are three types: coordinating, subordinating, and correlative. Master them, and your English becomes clearer and stronger.
Understanding conjunctions helps you:
Without conjunctions, your English may stay short and limited. With them, you can express complex thoughts confidently.
If you want to improve your English writing and speaking, you must understand the types of conjunctions in English. Many learners struggle to expand their sentences because they cannot connect ideas effectively.
When you understand sentence structure — simple, compound, complex, and compound-complex sentences — you can express your ideas more clearly and naturally. Conjunctions help you connect thoughts, add details, explain reasons, and build stronger sentences step by step.
Before learning conjunctions, you need to understand how sentences are formed.
A simple sentence has one complete idea (one independent clause).
Example:
I enjoy learning English.
It has:
When learners only rely on simple sentences, their communication becomes limited, repetitive, and sometimes unclear. A simple sentence communicates one idea, but real communication often requires explanation, comparison, or reasoning.
Unlike simple sentences, compound and complex sentences allow speakers and writers to connect ideas naturally, showing relationships such as cause, contrast, or result.
A compound sentence joins two independent clauses.
Example:
I enjoy learning English, and I practice every day.
Two complete ideas are connected.
A complex sentence has:
Example:
Though I tried hard, I did not pass the exam.
One idea supports the main idea.
This sentence contains:
Example:
I practice every day because I want to improve, and I watch English videos at night.
Judy doesn't like horror movies because they are scary, so she doesn't watch them.
These structures allow you to expand ideas clearly.
There are three main types of conjunctions in English:
Each type connects ideas in a different way.
Coordinating conjunctions connect equal ideas.
Correlative conjunctions work in pairs to create balance, comparison, and emphasis within a sentence.
Subordinating conjunctions show the relationship between dependent and independent ideas.
Coordinating conjunctions (such as and, but, or) help link equal thoughts smoothly.
Subordinating conjunctions (such as because, although, while) explain relationships like cause, contrast, time, or condition.
Common examples:
and, but, or, so, yet, for, nor
They connect:
Example:
I wanted to improve my English, so I joined a course.
Why they are important:
Correlative conjunctions (such as either…or, not only…but also, both…and) create parallel structure and highlight balance between two ideas. Together, these tools allow learners to express opinions more logically, describe experiences more clearly, and present arguments with stronger structure and emphasis.
Examples:
both…and
either…or
neither…nor
not only…but also
Example:
Not only did I improve my grammar, but I also became more confident.
Why they are important:
Subordinating conjunctions are words that connect a dependent clause to an independent clause. They show that one idea relies on another to make complete sense.
Unlike coordinating conjunctions, which join equal ideas, subordinating conjunctions create hierarchy. They signal relationships such as cause, contrast, condition, time, purpose, or result.
Common subordinating conjunctions include:
For example:
By using subordinating conjunctions, learners can explain reasons, show contrasts, describe conditions, and structure complex thoughts more clearly. They allow speakers and writers to move beyond simple sentences and express ideas with depth and precision.
Combine these sentences using a conjunction:
Try using different types of conjunctions.
Once learners recognize how sentences are built, conjunctions become easier to understand. Instead of memorizing linking words randomly, learners begin to see how each conjunction serves a purpose in expanding meaning. This foundation makes both speaking and writing more structured and confident over time.
If you would like step-by-step lessons with clear Burmese explanations and guided practice, you can explore the full courses at Zoeii English.
You’ll find structured lessons designed to help you master sentence structure and conjunctions confidently.