The word "in" is never a pronoun, a complete verb, or a conjunction.
The word 'in' is a preposition, an adverb, an adjective, and occasionally a noun.
EXAMPLES
Preposition: The man in the yellow car let me take the parking spot.
Adverb: We opened the door and stepped in.
Adjective: Charlie's is the in place to go.
Noun: I hear that you've got an in with the big wigs.
The word "Of" is a Preposition.
The word 'or' is not a pronoun; or is a conjunction, a preposition, or a noun.
No it is not. The word "that" can be a conjunction, determiner, pronoun or adverb.
No, for is a preposition and a conjunction.
The word 'of' is a preposition, a word that connects a noun or a pronoun to another word in a sentence. The preposition 'of' and the noun or pronoun that follows it is called a prepositional phrase.Example:Today is the first of October. (the preposition 'of' connects the noun 'October' to the noun 'first')I made a batch of chili but the kids ate most of it. (the preposition 'of' connects the personal pronoun 'it' to the indefinite pronoun 'most')
Neither word is a preposition. The word "him" is an objective personal pronoun, and worked is the past tense of the verb to work.
Parts of Speech Noun Verb PREposition Interjection ADJective ADVerb Conjunction PROnoun Simply put, the job or function of a word or phrase in a sentence.
The word "about" is a preposition. It cannot act as a conjunction to join clauses.
In conventional grammar the main parts of speech are noun, verb, adjective, adverb, pronoun, preposition, conjunction, interjection.
No. It is a pronoun, adjective, adverb, or a conjunction when used as "either...or."
They're is not a conjunction. It's a contraction of the pronoun "they" and the verb "are".
No. The word neither is an adjective, a pronoun, or a conjunction (neither/nor is a correlative conjunction).