No, it is not a preposition. In 'accepted an award' you have a past tense verb and its object. There is no preposition or prepositional phrase.
No, "accepted" is a verb in this context. It is the action of receiving or acknowledging an award.
Usually the preposition "to" or "into" follow the word "accepted." For example, one might say, "I was accepted into Harvard University." The preposition "by" is also sometimes used, as in "She was accepted by the group of girls."
Songwriter Paul Williams
Director Robert Wise accepted in his behalf.
Hi, if you want to use the word accepted , it needs to be a past tense. Ex. That day she accepted the award. I hope i helped have a good day
The greatest award Taylor Swift has ever accepted that she loved was the ones from the tween choice awards i think.
The correct sentence is "Give the award to whomever you think is best."The pronoun "whomever" is the objective form, functioning as the object of the preposition "to".The pronoun "whoever" is the subjective form.
Christopher Nolan, director of The Dark Knight.
Lata Mangeshkar. She refused to accept her first Filmfare Award because the Filmfare statuette was designed in the shape of a woman and "the woman had no clothes on"; the award had to be wrapped with a handkerchief for it to be accepted.
No, the adverb 'too' is incorrect and needs to be replaced by the preposition 'to', for the sentence to read 'You will tour a campus your son has been accepted to'.
Tiger Woods. Will Ferell accepted it for him. hilarious
The nominee for the Grammy graciously accepted the award given once in a blue moon.
It is generally accepted to end a sentence with a preposition in informal spoken English or when the preposition is part of a phrasal verb. In formal writing, however, it is often better to rephrase the sentence to avoid ending with a preposition.