No. It is an adverb.
The word (on) is the answer you are looking for
the preposition in that sentence is [in]
The preposition is "over" and the entire phrase is "over the workstation." A preposition is usually just one word, but it can be more.
A preposition is a word which governs a noun. It expresses a relation between that noun and another word or element in a clause or sentence."on" is a preposition -> the book on the table."after" is a preposition -> the package arrived afterI left the house.
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.
no their is not a preposition. a preposition is any thing you can do to a cloud. over under above through in
A single word doesn't have a preposition. The phrase 'in hovered' has 'in' as a preposition.
The word 'handsome' is an adjective. The word 'over' is functioning as a preposition. The word 'yeas' is a noun as the object of the preposition 'over'. The term 'handsome over the years' is a sentence fragment. There are NO pronouns in this sentence fragment.
The french word "sur" means "over" or "on" in the physical sense. It is a preposition. Le livre (the book) est (is) sur (on) la table (the table).
If the sentence indicates "a book is over there" then there is an adverb. If it means "there exists a book" then it is acting as a pronoun that precedes the subject (a book).
To have authority over something.
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.