No. Glass is a noun or adjective. It cannot be a preposition.
No it's an adverb. A preposition is a word which shows the relationship between objects in a sentence. For example the 'on' in the sentence 'the glass is on the table'. 'On' is the preposition that tells us what the glass is doing in relation to the table.
"In" is a preposition, so "in case" would be a prepositional phrase. "In case of emergency, break glass." Break glass is the sentence, an imperative one. In case AND of emergency are prepositional phrases, IN and OF being the prepositions.
There are no pronouns in the sentence, "Mike found fingerprints on the glass." Mike = proper noun, subject of the sentence found = verb of the sentence fingerprints = common noun, object of the verb on = preposition, introduces prepositional phrase the = definite article glass = common noun, object of the preposition
An adjective or preposition. Example as an adjective: "Persons of unlike gender who are not married to each other should not normally sleep in the same bed, according to old-fashioned morality" Example as a preposition, "Unlike Johan Sebastian Bach, Phillip Glass is a modern composer."
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
Yes. "A preposition links nouns, pronouns and phrases to other words in a sentence. The word or phrase that the preposition introduces is called the object of the preposition." In the following sentence: "Senator Young objected to the bill but he didn't say why," the word to is the preposition, and to the bill is the prepositional phrase. Additional Examples (with prepositions bolded): Put the glass onthe table. The water flows under the bridge.That kind of petty behavior is beneath me. Give the paper to your classmate.
flew is not a preposition. sorry but through is a preposition
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
its a preposition
At is a preposition. Anything that can be ___ the box is a preposition. For Example: At the box.
If is not a preposition. It is a conjunction.
If a preposition does not have an object, it is not a preposition. It is an adjective, adverb, or possibly a conjunction.