No. A bouquet is a noun ( a group of flowers, or a scent). It cannot be a preposition.
Nouns are words for people, places, and things.Nous function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, or as the object of a verb or a preposition.Pronouns take the place of nouns in a sentence. The function of pronouns in a sentence is the same as nouns.Examples:Noun as subject: John brought Jane a bouquet of flowers.Noun as subject of a clause: The flowers that John brought are for Jane.Noun as direct object: John brought Jane a bouquet of flowers.Noun as indirect object: John brought Jane a bouquet of flowers.Noun as object of a preposition: John brought Jane a bouquet of flowers.Pronoun as subject: He brought Jane a bouquet of flowers.Pronoun as subject of a clause: The flowers that he brought are for Jane.Pronoun as direct object: John brought her to the party.Pronoun as object of the preposition: John came to the party with her.
The word 'of' is a preposition, a word that show a relationship of a noun or pronoun and another word in a sentence.Examples:The bouquet of flowers is for you.I saw a picture of her.Two of the eggs are broken.
Bouquets is the plural of bouquet
A bouquet is a bunch of flowers. The bouquet of a wine is its smell.
medow They grow together in a meadow. They are put together in a bouquet.
bouquet
yes
Bouquet is not a compound word.
The spelling is "bouquet."
I am going to buy a bouquet of flowers
Pomander bouquet.
Addison Bouquet is 5' 4".