Yes, a verb serves as the predicate or denotes an action or occurrence in a sentence. "John ran swiftly." "John" is the noun, "ran" is the verb and "swiftly" is the adverb describing how John ran.
Yes, a preposition is a part of speech. Examples are between, above, under, to, at. They connect nouns and pronouns (their objects) to other words in the sentence, as a prepositional phrase.
a noun (i.e. the dog went to the flea market.)
(i.e. i took my turn after Alecia.)
The object in any part of a sentence is always either a noun or a pronoun.
However, this could be a noun phrase, a gerund (verbal noun), or an infinitive functioning as a noun.
Can Prepositional phrase function as a noun and can be a subject of the verb?
Yes, a preposition is one of the parts of speech.
(See related question for more information.)
In is a preposition
what part of speech is beneath
Between is a preposition and an adverb.
On the mountain top is a preposition phrase, not a part of speech.
'As' is both a preposition and a conjunction.
Preposition
In is a preposition
"Into" is a preposition.
preposition
From is a preposition.
From is a preposition.
A preposition.
preposition
In is a preposition
In is a preposition
In is a preposition
PREPOSITION