Yes, although it can also be used as a standalone adverb.
Yes, "across" is a preposition, as it shows the relationship between two things or places in terms of direction or location.
No, "across" is not a conjunction. It is a preposition used to indicate movement from one side to another.
Yes, "across" is a preposition. It is used to show the position of something on the opposite side of a specific reference point.
The word apart is an adverb. The others can all be prepositions; over and across can be adverbs.
Yes There is a song About above across after........
The cat jumped across the table to catch the mouse.
No. "Across" is a preposition.
No, "across" is not a conjunction. It is a preposition used to indicate movement from one side to another.
The prepositional phrase is "...across the sky." "Across" is the preposition, and "the sky" is the object of the preposition.
The word across is actually two parts of speech. It is both a preposition (he traveled across the world) and an adverb (Jane could not get her message across).
It can be. But it can also be a preposition (e.g. across the valley).
Almost! It is a preposition.
Yes, "across" is a preposition. It is used to show the position of something on the opposite side of a specific reference point.
No, "they" cannot be used as a preposition. Common ones are about, above, across, after... there are many more.
The word apart is an adverb. The others can all be prepositions; over and across can be adverbs.
Yes There is a song About above across after........
The cat jumped across the table to catch the mouse.
Yes, "towards" is a compound preposition that indicates direction or movement in a specific direction, similar to "into" or "across."