joeldruark-patch-1 (#673)

Reviewed-on: https://git.door43.org/unfoldingWord/en_uhg/pulls/673
This commit is contained in:
Joel D. Ruark 2022-10-28 21:23:05 +00:00
parent 3a3bd4a6c0
commit ae8ca09c40
4 changed files with 7 additions and 2 deletions

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@ -405,7 +405,6 @@ usually translated as "so that...not" (or similar phrasing) in English.
Be careful **that** you speak to Jacob **neither** good **nor** bad.
רַק
----
.. _conjunction-restrictive:
@ -418,6 +417,8 @@ Compound conjunctions
.. include:: includes/notes/conjunction-compound.rst
.. _conjunction-concessive:
.. include:: includes/conjunction-concessive.rst
כִּי אִם
~~~~~~~~
Sometimes the words כִּי and אִם are paired together to form a compound conjunction that functions most often as a strong contrastive

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These compounds should not be considered merely as the sum of the component terms.
Rather, they should be considered as a single grammatical entity with its own range of meanings which may or may not be different than the individual component terms.

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A ``concessive`` conjunction expresses an exception or disclaimer to what has been stated immediately previous.

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A ``conjunction`` is a word that shows a relationship between two different words, phrases, sentences, or even entire paragraphs.
In other words, conjunctions are grammatical connectors.
The most common conjunctions in English are "and," "or," "but," and "for."
The most common conjunctions in English are "and," "or," "but," and "for."
Conjunctions are closely related to both sentential adverbs and particles.