authority on flowers
here authority means expert
of
The man is an authority ____ flower
The boy must apologise ___ the lady
The man is an authority on flowers.
In
On
To
On
OF
The preposition in the sentence is "like".
Yes, a preposition shows the relationship between its object (noun or pronoun) and another word in a sentence. The preposition typically indicates direction, location, time, or other relationships between the object and other elements of the sentence.
Yes, that is correct. Prepositions typically indicate location, direction, time, or the relationship between nouns or pronouns in a sentence. They often come before nouns or pronouns to show their relationship to other words in the sentence.
A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between its object and another word in the sentence.Examples:She brought some flowers forher mother. (the preposition 'for' connects its object 'mother' to the noun 'flowers')He ran with the scissors in his hand. (the preposition 'with' connects its object 'scissors' to the verb 'ran')A man in a raincoat came in. (the preposition 'in' connects its object 'raincoat' to the noun 'man')
The preposition in the sentence is "at" (stared at).
The man ON the platform was staring back at me. This is an example sentence for preposition.
A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between its object and another word in the sentence.Examples:She brought some flowers forher mother. (the preposition 'for' connects its object 'mother' to the noun 'flowers')He ran with the scissors in his hand. (the preposition 'with' connects its object 'scissors' to the verb 'ran')A man in a raincoat came in. (the preposition 'in' connects its object 'raincoat' to the noun 'man')
A preposition is a word placed before a noun or pronoun to form a phrase relating to another word in the sentence. A preposition with its object forms a prepositional phrase.Examples of prepositions: for, with, in, to, between, etc.Example of prepositional phrases:She brought some flowers for her mother. (the preposition 'for' connects its object 'mother' to the noun 'flowers')He ran with the scissors in his hand. (the preposition 'with' connects its object 'scissors' to the verb 'ran')A man in a raincoat came in. (the preposition 'in' connects its object 'raincoat' to the noun 'man')
A preposition typically comes after a noun or pronoun to show the relationship between that noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "I am going to the store," "store" is a noun followed by the preposition "to" indicating direction.
A preposition is a part of speech that starts a prepositional phrase, such as "the man OF THE HOUSE". The preposition would be "of" and the complete phrase would be "of the house". I guess you could say that a preposition describes nouns, as in aforementioned sentence, "man" would just be a plain noun without the phrase.
The man had an impulse to buy flowers for his wife to surprise her.
I'm about 90% certain it is an adverb. About can serve as an adverb, preposition or adjective. I'm 99.9999999999999% certain it isn't an adjective as used here, but preposition or adverb depends on whether there is anything more to the sentence: He wandered about (aimlessly) => about is an adverb He wandered about the park => about is a preposition