No, rain is not a preposition. Rain is a noun referring to water that falls from the sky in drops. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
"Drenched" is typically used with the preposition "in" to indicate the thing that is wet. For example, "I got drenched in the rain" or "The plants were drenched in water."
In the sentence, "There is not likely to be rain except in Scotland," there appears to be two prepositions following each other: 'except' and 'in.' I am assuming 'except in' can function as a discrete preposition because I don't think you can put two prepositions in a row.
"in the mud puddles" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It consists of the preposition "in" and its object "mud puddles".
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
Examples of phrases that begin with a preposition and end with a noun or a pronoun:"at the movies""before class""behind you""despite the rain""except me""for my mother""in trouble""over the rainbow""since yesterday""to Miami""until tomorrow""with my brother"
in..I think.:/
"Drenched" is typically used with the preposition "in" to indicate the thing that is wet. For example, "I got drenched in the rain" or "The plants were drenched in water."
The sentence...The rain fell against the window....contains several parts of speech. The (article) rain (subject/noun) fell (verb) against the window. (prepositional phrase) against (preposition) the (article) window (object of the preposition/noun)
In the sentence, "There is not likely to be rain except in Scotland," there appears to be two prepositions following each other: 'except' and 'in.' I am assuming 'except in' can function as a discrete preposition because I don't think you can put two prepositions in a row.
Here, through is an adverb. If through is followed by an object (through the rain, through Indian territory), then it would be acting as a preposition.
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
"in the mud puddles" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It consists of the preposition "in" and its object "mud puddles".
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.
Examples of phrases that begin with a preposition and end with a noun or a pronoun:"at the movies""before class""behind you""despite the rain""except me""for my mother""in trouble""over the rainbow""since yesterday""to Miami""until tomorrow""with my brother"
A prepositional phrase consists of two essential parts: a preposition (such as in, on, at, by) and an object of the preposition (a noun or pronoun). These parts work together to show the relationship between the object and other elements in the sentence.
its a preposition