After preposition we use object.
It is a preposition. It cannot stand alone to modify a verb.
Beside is a preposition. Stood is the past tense of stand.
Near is a preposition. Stood is the past tense of the verb "to stand".
Please stand along the wall.
Yes, "under" is a preposition that is typically used to indicate location or position beneath or below something else.
It is a preposition. It cannot stand alone to modify a verb.
It is a preposition. It cannot stand alone to modify a verb.
Beside is a preposition. Stood is the past tense of stand.
Near is a preposition. Stood is the past tense of the verb "to stand".
Please stand along the wall.
Yes, "under" is a preposition that is typically used to indicate location or position beneath or below something else.
No. Stood is the past tense of the verb "to stand."
Probably the preposition on should be at.I waited for you at the bus stand but you did not come
many sculptures stand freely so that you can walk around me.
Yes, it can indicate the general location as in "stand by" or "the car raced by." But it is more often a preposition.
The term "outside" can be used as a preposition AND an adverb - depending on how the sentence is phrased.For example:I walked outside. (In this sentence, "outside" is an adverb because "I walked" can stand alone as an individual sentence.)Outside of the house, the winds roared. (In this case, "outside" is a preposition because the rest of the sentence cannot stand alone.)
It can be, or it can stand alone as an adverb or adjective. There are two or more forms of "down" that are nouns.