Yes, "at" is a preposition used to indicate location or direction. It is commonly used to specify a specific point or place in a sentence.
No, "keep" is a verb. It means to have or retain possession of something.
Over the smooth gray stones is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
A preposition is a word that establishes a relationship between its object and another word in the sentence. It typically indicates location, direction, time, or introduces a particular relationship between elements in a sentence. Common prepositions include "in," "on," "under," "before," and "after."
a word the can be pronounced differently.
"Mother gave me a card for my birthday."*Bold = Noun/Pronoun*Italics = Verb*Normal = Preprosition"Mother gave me a card for my birthday."*Italics = Subject*Normal = Predicate
No, "keep" is a verb. It means to have or retain possession of something.
The preposition, the noun that follows it, and any articles, adjectives, and adverbs for that noun are the prepositionalphrase.
Over the smooth gray stones is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
A preposition is a word that establishes a relationship between its object and another word in the sentence. It typically indicates location, direction, time, or introduces a particular relationship between elements in a sentence. Common prepositions include "in," "on," "under," "before," and "after."
a word the can be pronounced differently.
simple: "How do you use the word primogeniture in a sentence?"<---that is a complete sentence. its go:t a verb(use) subject(you?) preprositional phrase(in a sentence) and a preprosition(in).
"Mother gave me a card for my birthday."*Bold = Noun/Pronoun*Italics = Verb*Normal = Preprosition"Mother gave me a card for my birthday."*Italics = Subject*Normal = Predicate