Yes, "over" is a preposition. It is used to indicate movement or position above something.
Some examples of objects of a preposition are: "She sat on the chair." - "Chair" is the object of the preposition "on." "The cat jumped over the fence." - "Fence" is the object of the preposition "over." "I put the keys in the drawer." - "Drawer" is the object of the preposition "in."
No, the word "their" is a possessive determiner, not a preposition. It is used to show that something belongs to a group of people or things.
The word apart is an adverb. The others can all be prepositions; over and across can be adverbs.
A phrase is two or three words.A preposition is a single word like on / up / over / throughA prepositional phrase is a phrase (two or three or more words) with a preposition = on the table / through the gate / over the bridge
"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.
"Over" is a preposition.
The preposition is "over" and the entire phrase is "over the workstation." A preposition is usually just one word, but it can be more.
Over is a preposition, and can also be an adverb. It may be a noun but not a pronoun.
Over is a preposition.
No, the word "their" is a possessive determiner, not a preposition. It is used to show that something belongs to a group of people or things.
It can be either, depending on how it's being used. If it has a noun as its object, it is a preposition. The horse fell over. (adverb) The horse fell over the cliff. (preposition)
Some examples of objects of a preposition are: "She sat on the chair." - "Chair" is the object of the preposition "on." "The cat jumped over the fence." - "Fence" is the object of the preposition "over." "I put the keys in the drawer." - "Drawer" is the object of the preposition "in."
Over.
The word over can be a preposition, giving a location with respect to its object. Over can also be a noun, adjective, adverb, or interjection.
It is not a preposition nor does it include a preposition. Examples of prepositions are for, of, on, over, through, with, etc.
A single word doesn't have a preposition. The phrase 'in hovered' has 'in' as a preposition.
The word "over" is an adverb. In other cases, over can be used as a preposition, e.g. Sarah threw the box over the fence.