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Jack1234 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Because and But at the start of the sentence

May I know instead of
"Something is unimportant at circumstances A, but something is important in circumstances B."
is it grammatically correct for the following sentence?

"Something is unimportant at circumstances A. But something is important in circumstances B."

The same go to "because"
Why are such discontinuities in progression so common in your first draft? Because when you write a new sentence, thoughts relevant to previous sentences bubble up to the surface of your consciousness to disrupt smooth topic progression.

If it is correct, what is the sentence structure these two sentences that start with But and Because belong to?
  

Top answer

The technique of beginning a sentence with such a conjunction is occasionally used to provide emphasis, but it is usually abused by language learners, and they should be discouraged from using it until they are fluent writers.

  • The technique of beginning a sentence with such a conjunction is occasionally used to provide emphasis, but it is usually abused by language learners, and they should be discouraged from using it until they are fluent writers.
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1 Answers
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The technique of beginning a sentence with such a conjunction is occasionally used to provide emphasis, but it is usually abused by language learners, and they should be discouraged from using it until they are fluent writers.

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