No, it is not a preposition. It is not even a clear phrase. "The work" is a noun and "runs" can be a verb or a plural noun.
It would only be used with work in a colloquial construction such as "the work runs from January to March" or "the work (street work) runs from First Street to Second Street."
* "The word runs" is not a preposition. It is a verb.
no
No, "work" is not a preposition. It can be a noun (employment, activity, or energy expended) or a verb meaning to engage in (gainful) activity.
The preposition "with" is typically used with the verb "interfere." For example, "He always interferes with my work."
There is no preposition in this sentence."To" is used as a preposition when it tells you additional information.Example: Please give the papers to Mrs. Johnson.Here, "to" directs you on what to do with the papers.In your sentence, it is part of the verb, "to work".If you were using "work" as a noun and not a verb, it would be a preposition.Example: She has to get up at six to make it to work on time.To work is not an action here (verb). It is a place, her office or store, so it is a noun.Hope this helps!
There are no situations that come to mind where a preposition would be used BEFORE "takes pride", so the correct preposition FOLLOWING the phrase would be "in". He takes pride in his work. She takes pride in her beautiful home.
Neither word is a preposition. The word "him" is an objective personal pronoun, and worked is the past tense of the verb to work.
in
Actually, "for" is neither an adjective nor a verb. It is either a preposition or a conjunction. Preposition: I work for a large software company. Conjunction: I left the celebration early, for I still had much work to do.
The preposition that typically follows the word pride is "in." For example, one might say "I take pride in my work."
No, it is not. Hard can be an adjective, or an adverb (to work hard, not hardly).
Yes, till can be a preposition. It is a form of "until."
In order to succeed, one must work hard. The preposition in this sentence is "to."