A compound sentence contains two or more independent or main clauses. A complex sentence contains two or more clauses, at least one of which is subordinate. It is a multiple sentence built up on the principle of subordination. Coordination: The linking by coordinators of clauses and other sentence parts of equal meaning and grammatical value. Coordination can link nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbials, etc. - syndetic and asyndetic coordination Slowly and stealthily, he crept towards the victim. Slowly, stealthily, he crept towards his victim. (Quirk et al. 1985: 918) Coordinators: the coordinating conjunctions (and, or, but), related adverbs (once, so), and correlatives that link (coordinate) clauses and other sentence elements of equal meaning and grammatical value. They looked ragged and thin but not actually starving. John played football, and Mary played tennis, but Alice stayed at home.
principles 1 involved by inquiring whether any of her ambassadors had corresponded too much in a single nomenclator and ought to be given a new key. The cryptanalysts sometimes even got paid for not solving a cipher: if a key was stolen from an embassy, the codebreakers would get a kind of unemployment compensation because they had no opportunity to win their bonus. In 1833, for example, the cabinet got three fifths of the solution bonus when the key of the French envoy was stealthily removed, copied, and replaced in a cupboard in the bedroom of the secretary of the French legation within a single night. A good glimpse into the achievements of the Geheime Kabinets- Kanzlei is afforded by the letters of one of its best directors, Baron Ignaz de Koch, who served from 1749 to 1763 with the cover-title of secretary to Maria Theresa. On September 4, 1751, he sent to the Austrian ambassador in France some cryptanalyzed correspondence which