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Circle each independent clause in the sentence below (some sentences may only have one). Next, say whether the conjunction is used to show an agreement, disagreement, or reason. I normally like to run,but today I am walking agreement / disagreement / reason

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Final answer:

The independent clauses in the sentence 'I normally like to run,but today I am walking' are 'I normally like to run' and 'today I am walking.' The coordinating conjunction 'but' indicates a disagreement or contrast in the action usually preferred and the action chosen today.

Step-by-step explanation:

The sentence you are asking about contains two independent clauses: 'I normally like to run' and 'today I am walking.' These independent clauses are joined by the coordinating conjunction 'but', which is used to show a disagreement between the two clauses. In the first clause, the action of liking to run is presented, and in the second clause, there is a contrast with the action of walking instead. Therefore, 'but' is indicating that there is a deviation from the usual preference to run.

User David Haynes
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8.6k points
4 votes

Answer: Circle "I normally like to run", and choose "disagreement".

Explanation: "I normally like to run" could stand as a sentence on it's own, so it's independant. The sentence uses the word "but", which shows a disagreement. Maybe you could think of it like the person is disagreeing with what she/he usually does, (running), and instead is walking.

User Petter Thowsen
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8.2k points

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