The adjective "unlike" makes a comparison between two nouns, saying that one is different in some way from the other. You can use unlike followed by a noun to create a prepositional phrase.
Fish have gills and can live underwater. Mammals do not have gills.
Unlike mammals, fish have gills and can live underwater.
Yes, it is also a preposition. It is positioned unlike planned.
"Unlike" is a preposition, not a conjunction. It is used to show the difference or contrast between two things.
Unlike is an adjective and a preposition.
An adjective or preposition. Example as an adjective: "Persons of unlike gender who are not married to each other should not normally sleep in the same bed, according to old-fashioned morality" Example as a preposition, "Unlike Johan Sebastian Bach, Phillip Glass is a modern composer."
You use a preposition in a prepositional phrase, such as "I will be with you in a minute."
You can use the preposition "with" with the verb "disagree." For example, "I disagree with your opinion."
use the preposition
The word "during" is a preposition used for adverbial phrases. It represents the present time, and unlike the preposition-adverbs before and after, it cannot be used without an object.
Yes, you can use the word but as a preposition. It is a preposition the same as about, by, for, and than.
No, it is not. It is a verb form, the past tense of "to disagree." Unlike its antonym (agreed), it is not used as an adjective.
When can you use than as a preposition rather than a conjunction?
no