though

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๐Ÿ”Š Pronunciation

/รฐษ™สŠ/

๐Ÿ“ Conjunction Type

Type: subordinating
Function: concessive
Register: neutral

๐Ÿ“– Meanings & Functions

despite the fact that

Relation: concession
“Though it was raining, we went for a walk”
“The movie was good, though rather long”
“She succeeded, though not easily”
Function: introduces contrasting information

however (as sentence modifier)

Relation: contrast
“That's what she said, though”

๐Ÿ”— Syntactic Patterns

Clause initial

though + subordinate clause, main clause
“Though he studied hard, he failed the exam”
Punctuation: comma required

Clause medial

main clause + though + subordinate clause
“He passed the test though he hadn't studied”
Punctuation: no comma usually required

Clause final

main clause + though
“The weather was nice, though”
Punctuation: comma required

Parenthetical use

interrupting main clause
“The project, though challenging, was completed on time”
Punctuation: requires paired commas

โœ๏ธ Punctuation Rules

Comma Usage

Before conjunction: required in initial position
After conjunction: not required unless parenthetical
With introductory clause: required after introductory clause
In lists: not applicable
โœ“ Though it rained, we enjoyed the picnic.
โŒ Though it rained we enjoyed the picnic
Comma required after introductory though-clause

๐Ÿ”— Clause Combining

Can connect:

Phrases Independent clauses Dependent clauses Sentences

Tense patterns:

Present combinations:

Though it rains, we go out
Though it is raining, we will go
Past combinations:

Though it rained, we went out
Though it had rained, we went
Mixed tense rules: Any tense combination possible if logically compatible
Sequence of tenses: No strict sequence required

๐Ÿ“š Discourse & Coherence

Text organization: introduces contrasting or qualifying information
Paragraph use: signals concessive relationships between ideas
Academic writing: formal alternative to 'but' for presenting counterarguments

Coherence patterns:

introduces counterpoints in argumentation
qualifies statements in exposition
adds complexity to descriptions

โš ๏ธ Common Errors

โŒ Though it rained but we went out.โ†’โœ“ Though it rained, we went out.
Double marking of contrast
Common for: Languages allowing double contrast markers
โŒ Though.โ†’โœ“ Though it was difficult.
Incomplete thought
โŒ We went though it rained though.โ†’โœ“ We went though it rained.
Redundant use
โŒ Though it rained.โ†’โœ“ Though it rained, we continued.
Missing main clause

Major – incomplete meaning impact

โŒ Though it was raining we went.โ†’โœ“ Though it was raining, we went.
Missing comma
Common for: Languages without comma rules
โŒ Though to rain we went.โ†’โœ“ Though it was raining, we went.
Incorrect verb form after though

๐ŸŒ Etymology

Origin: Old English 'รพeah'
Original meaning: “nevertheless, however”
Development: from Germanic *รพauh