Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Unconfounding the after

How do you tell if words such as after, before, and until are subordinating conjunctions or prepositional phrases?

IF "AFTER" IS FOLLOWED BY A CLAUSE (i.e. includes subject and verb), IT IS A SUBORDINATING CONJUNCTION. IF "AFTER" IS FOLLOWED BY AN OBJECT, IT IS A PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE.

PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE
  • Charlie will wait here until sunset. ("until sunset" acts as an adverb)
  • It will be some time before summer. ("before summer" acts as an adjective)
  • After that effort, everyone doubts whether she can win. ("after that effort" acts as an adverb)

SUBORDINATING CONJUNCTION

  • Charlie will wait here until we finish the test.
  • It will be some time before the seasons change.
  • After she did so badly, everyone doubted whether she could win.


Source for examples: The Tongue Untied

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