1

I’ve often come across articles saying we should not start a sentence with a conjunction. However, many many times have I seen a sentence starting with ‘But’. Isn’t But a conjunction? Or is it an exception? I’m very confused about what actually is the rule here. Please explain.

WhySee
  • 143
  • 7

2 Answers2

1

But of course you can! It's quite common. It's not a hard rule, it's just a recommendation found in some (not all!) style guides for formal and professional writing. In everyday language it's perfectly normal and acceptable to begin a sentence with a conjunction.

Another commonly cited "rule" is to avoid ending a sentence with a preposition. This is also only a recommendation and nowadays almost always disregarded. This led to a famous quote, often wrongly attributed to Winston Churchill:

This is the type of arrant pedantry up with which I will not put!

TypeIA
  • 12,270
  • 1
  • 26
  • 32
  • 1
    Oh...Ok. Thanks for the insight. I’m a newbie so can’t upvote. But I’ll accept it for sure. – WhySee May 21 '21 at 18:22
0

In general, it sounds weird to begin a sentence with "but", except in the British idiom "but of course".

In cases where you would want to use "but" at the beginning of a sentence, "however" is usually a suitable replacement. For example, in your comment on TypeIA's answer, I would have said "I'm a newbie so I can't upvote. However, I'll accept it".

Ertai87
  • 807
  • 1
  • 5
  • 5
  • Oh. I get it now. So can I use ‘Yet’ as a replacement as well? – WhySee May 21 '21 at 18:26
  • "Yet" is kind of archaic and sounds odd in today's English. But I suppose it would work. – Ertai87 May 21 '21 at 18:38
  • 1
    What about Nevertheless and nonetheless? I suppose those two are appropriate too? – user516076 May 21 '21 at 23:57
  • Nevertheless and nonetheless are fine, although they're quite formal. In less formal writing/speech, "But" is probably better. Or you can use an adverb like "Still" or a phrase like "Even so". – Stuart F Mar 18 '24 at 12:39