It can be, when it is used instead of until (He was sleeping till the rooster woke him).
Otherwise it is a preposition (till dawn, till then).
A homonym for till is a noun or verb related to farming.
Depending on context, "till" can be a preposition, conjunction, noun or verb.
Yes, till can be a preposition. It is a form of "until."
The homograph for "till" can refer to either "until" as a conjunction or "cash register" as a noun.
The conjunctions that start with "t" are all "subordinating conjunctions." than, that, though, till
B Than is not a preposition. It is a conjunction used to make comparisons.
co-ordinating conjunction ("and," "but," "or," "nor," "for," "so," or "yet")subordinating conjunction ("after," "although," "as," "because," "before," "how," "if," "once," "since," "than," "that," "though," "till," "until," "when," "where," "whether," and "while.")Correlative conjunctions ("both...and," "either...or," "neither...nor,", "not only...but also," "so...as," and "whether...or.")
In conjunction with
It may depend upon which 'till'you mean 1. To fight till death - preposition. 2. Till the time that - conjunction.....till and until are interchangable 3. To Till, as in labour by plowing - verb 4. A Till - is a drawer or a box or something in which money is kept - noun 5. As for adjectives - words such as mill-tilled or well-tilled would be appropriate
It is a conjunction.
No, "wow" is not a conjunction. It's an interjection.
Yes, it is a subordinating conjunction. It connects a restrictive clause.
There is no conjunction of will not.Maybe you mean contraction.If you do then won't is the contraction