No, it is not a preposition. The word one is a noun, pronoun, or adjective.
No, "one" is not a preposition. It is often used as a pronoun or a determiner to refer to a specific thing or person.
"Which one" is not a preposition. A preposition is a part of speech which introduces a related object, for example "over the table," "in the barn," "beside the station," "during class." "Which one" does not take an object. Syntactically, it is a combination of a noun ("one") with an interrogative adjective ("which"). "Which one" could be an object of a preposition (e.g. "On which one did you bestow the gift") but not a preposition.
The preposition in the sentence is "except". It shows the relationship between the eggs breaking and the one that did not break.
The word "is" is not an object of a preposition because it is a verb. Objects of a preposition are typically nouns or pronouns that receive the action of the preposition.
No, "together" is not a preposition. It is an adverb that is used to indicate two or more people or things being in one place or gathered as a group.
No, "week" is not an object of a preposition. It is the object of the preposition if a prepositional phrase includes "week" and a preposition. For example, in the phrase "during the week," "week" is the object of the preposition "during."
There is no preposition in "catching fish is one".
Of is a preposition.
use the preposition
"Which one" is not a preposition. A preposition is a part of speech which introduces a related object, for example "over the table," "in the barn," "beside the station," "during class." "Which one" does not take an object. Syntactically, it is a combination of a noun ("one") with an interrogative adjective ("which"). "Which one" could be an object of a preposition (e.g. "On which one did you bestow the gift") but not a preposition.
The preposition in the sentence is "except". It shows the relationship between the eggs breaking and the one that did not break.
The word "is" is not an object of a preposition because it is a verb. Objects of a preposition are typically nouns or pronouns that receive the action of the preposition.
No and it will never be one.
No. The numeral 1, or the word one, is a noun or an adjective. It cannot be a preposition.
No, "together" is not a preposition. It is an adverb that is used to indicate two or more people or things being in one place or gathered as a group.
No, "week" is not an object of a preposition. It is the object of the preposition if a prepositional phrase includes "week" and a preposition. For example, in the phrase "during the week," "week" is the object of the preposition "during."
The word, "for" is the preposition in your sentence.
The preposition is "over" and the entire phrase is "over the workstation." A preposition is usually just one word, but it can be more.