although

high frequency – among top 1000 English wordsGeneralBusinessAcademic

šŸ”Š Pronunciation

/ɔːlĖˆĆ°É™ŹŠ/

šŸ“ Conjunction Type

Type: subordinating
Function: concessive
Register: neutral to formal

šŸ“– Meanings & Functions

introduces a contrast or unexpected relationship between two ideas

Relation: concession
“Although it was raining, we went for a walk.”
“She passed the exam although she hadn't studied much.”
“The project succeeded although we faced many challenges.”
Function: signals unexpected result or contrast

acknowledges a fact while asserting a contrasting point

Relation: contrast with acknowledgment
“Although expensive, the investment was worthwhile.”

šŸ”— Syntactic Patterns

Clause initial

although + subordinate clause, main clause
“Although the weather was bad, the event went ahead.”
Punctuation: comma required

Clause medial

main clause + although + subordinate clause
“The event went ahead although the weather was bad.”
Punctuation: no comma usually required

Clause final

main clause + although + subordinate clause
“We enjoyed the party although it ended early.”
Punctuation: no comma usually required

Parenthetical use

although + reduced clause
“The solution, although expensive, proved effective.”
Punctuation: requires paired commas

āœļø Punctuation Rules

Comma Usage

Before conjunction: never
After conjunction: required when clause is introductory
With introductory clause: comma required after entire clause
In lists: not applicable
āœ“ Although it rained, we enjoyed the picnic.
āŒ Although it rained we enjoyed the picnic.
Comma required after introductory clause

šŸ”— Clause Combining

Can connect:

Phrases Independent clauses Dependent clauses

Tense patterns:

Present combinations:

Although it is raining, I am going out.
Past combinations:

Although it was raining, I went out.
Mixed tense rules: Any tense combination possible if logically compatible
Sequence of tenses: No strict sequence required

šŸ“š Discourse & Coherence

Text organization: introduces counterarguments and concessions
Paragraph use: signals balanced viewpoint
Academic writing: frequent in argumentative and analytical writing

Coherence patterns:

concession-assertion pattern
balanced argument structure
qualification of previous statement

āš ļø Common Errors

āŒ Although it rained but we went out.ā†’āœ“ Although it rained, we went out.
Double marking of contrast
Common for: Languages that allow double marking
āŒ Although it rained.ā†’āœ“ Although it rained, we stayed dry.
Incomplete thought – needs main clause
āŒ We went out although it rains.ā†’āœ“ We went out although it was raining.
Incorrect tense agreement
āŒ Although, we went out.ā†’āœ“ Although it was cold, we went out.
Missing subordinate clause

High – meaning unclear impact

āŒ We although went out it was raining.ā†’āœ“ Although it was raining, we went out.
Wrong position of conjunction
Common for: SOV language interference
āŒ Although the weather, we went out.ā†’āœ“ Although the weather was bad, we went out.
Incomplete subordinate clause

šŸŒ Etymology

Origin: Middle English, from all + though
Original meaning: “completely though”
Development: merged from separate words to single conjunction