Subordinating Ideas
Subordinating an idea means
that you consider it less important than another idea. A sentence that
contains a primary idea and subordinate idea(s) can act as a good thesis
statement because it can suggest a focus for a paper and provide some of
the reasoning behind your views. Subordinating ideas also helps you make
smooth transitions between sentences and paragraphs.
Suppose you want to combine these ideas:
Fewer and fewer oysters are left in the
Chesapeake Bay. Increasing numbers of fishermen tong for oysters
during the bleak winter months.
You can combine the statements to emphasize the
increasing number of fishermen (which becomes your primary idea):
Increasing numbers of fishermen tong for oysters
during the bleak winter months, so fewer and fewer oysters are left in
the Chesapeake Bay.
You could also write the sentence to have your
primary idea be the fact that fewer oysters are left:
Fewer and fewer oysters are left in the
Chesapeake Bay because increasing numbers of fishermen tong for
oysters during the bleak winter months.
In both examples, the primary idea could stand
alone as a complete sentence, whereas the subordinate ideas begin with
subordinating conjunctions "so" and "because". These
words indicate that what follows receives less weight in the sentence.
Some Subordinating
Conjunctions:
Contrast: although,
even though, while
Degree: inasmuch as, insofar as, to the
extent that
Cause: because, since, as
Time: when, whenever, while, once, before,
after, since, until, as long as, as soon as
Condition: if, when, provided that, in
case, assuming that, as long as
Place: where, wherever
Negative Condition: unless
Alternative Condition: whether or not |