Which parts of speech is used to join two clauses:

(A) Conjunction
(B) Interjection
(C) Adverb
(D) None of these

🧠 Explanation:

A conjunction is the part of speech used to join two clauses, phrases, or words. It creates a link that helps sentences flow logically. For example, in the sentence “I studied hard because I had an exam,” the word “because” connects the main clause with the reason clause. Conjunctions are of different types: coordinating (and, but, or), subordinating (because, although, if), and correlative (either…or, neither…nor). Using the right conjunction makes communication clearer and more coherent. In grammar, “conjunction” is a noun naming this category. Alternatives could be “connector” or “linking word” in less formal contexts.