Prepositions and Conjunctions 157
O n the sentence level it must be said that conjunctions connect clauses (of different kinds). Here we find both so-called co-ordinating and so-called subordinating conjunctions.
The division of conjunctions into co-ordinating and subordinating is one that can hardly be dealt with outside syntax: co-ordinating conjunctions imply co-ordination of clauses, and subordinating conjunctions imply subordination of clauses. So we shall have to look again into this question when we come to syntax.
1 Here it will be sufficient to say that there is nothing in the conjunction itself to show whether it is co-ordinating or subordinating, and even in the structure of the clauses there is no unmistakable sign of this (as
is the case, for instance, with word order in Modern German).
Conjunctions can sometimes lose their connecting function, as is the case with the conjunction
if in sentences expressing wish, like the following
: If only she might play the question loud enough to reach the ears of this Paul Steitler. (BUECHNER) Probably we shall have to say that
if here is no longer a conjunction but a particle. We will consider such cases in Syntax as well.
2
PREPOSITIONS AND CONJUNCTIONS
In comparing prepositions with co-ordinating and subordinating conjunctions we cannot fail to notice that while prepositions have nothing in common with co-ordinating conjunctions, some prepositions are very close in meaning to subordinating conjunctions, and in some cases a preposition and a subordinating conjunction sound exactly the same. As examples of similarity in meaning we may give, for instance, such phrases and clauses:
during his illness = while he was ill', examples of complete identity in meaning and sound are the words
before, after, since.
All this presents us with intricate problems. On the one hand, it seems doubtful whether we are right in uniting subordinating conjunctions (that is,
words like when, as, after, before, since) together with co-ordinating conjunctions (that is, words like
and, but, or) into one part of speech and separating them from prepositions (that is, words like
of, from, after, before, since), with which they obviously have much more in common. On the other hand, it remains doubtful how we should treat the relations between the preposition
after and the conjunction
after (and similarly,
before and
since). None of the treatments so far proposed seems satisfactory.
One way is to say,
there is the word after, which may function both as a preposition and as a conjunction. But then the question
1 See below, p. 315 ff.
2 See below, Chapter XXXVII, p. 293 ff,