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Mihriban moviemaker Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

And thus/thus/therefore

And thus/thus?? What is the different between their? And is 'therefore' common mean with these??

I saw some sentence;

There was a problem in the school, thus i went home late

I had studied a lot, therefore i passed the exam easily

Can i use and thus instead of therefore in this sentence?

  

Top answer

Thus and therefore are adverbs, not conjunctions, so to join two sentences you need to say eg and thus eg and therefore. Thus and therefore are rather formal words. In casual English, we are more likely to say eg so.

  • Thus and therefore are adverbs, not conjunctions, so to join two sentences you need to say eg and thus eg and therefore.
  • Thus and therefore are rather formal words.
  • In casual English, we are more likely to say eg so.
  • The personal pronoun I is always a capital letter.
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1 Answers
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Thus and therefore are adverbs, not conjunctions, so to join two sentences you need to say eg and thus eg and therefore.

Thus and therefore are rather formal words. In casual English, we are more likely to say eg so.


The personal pronoun I is always a capital letter.

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