The preposition is through.
The noun 'tunnel' is the object of the preposition.
Through
what is the preposition and object of the sentence "i am going into the dark cave and tunnel
"Through" can be a preposition when used to describe movement within something, such as passing through a tunnel. It can also be an adverb when expressing the completion of an action, as in "I saw it through."
No, the word 'through' is not a verb.The word 'through' is a preposition, adverb, or an adjective.Examples:The ball went through a window. (preposition, 'a window' is the object of the preposition)We came through without a scratch. (adverb, modifies the verb 'came')The through traffic must take the left lane. (adjective, describes the noun 'traffic')When I finish this answer, I'm through. (predicate adjective, restates the subject 'I')To test if a word is a verb, can we say the verb is 'to through'? We can say 'to throw', and say "I throw, You throw, He throws .." etc, but 'I through, You through, He throughs ..." just doesn't make sense! So through is not a verb.Analysis of sentence containing the word through:"The train (noun) went (verb) through (preposition) the tunnel (noun, object of the preposition)."
I surmise that the criminal left through this escape tunnel.
They went through the tunnel on the train. They were through with the project and went home happy.
Going through the tunnel, the radio was too static to hear.
The car was unable to go through the tunnel because it was too narrow.
Through the Tunnel was created in 1990.
Tunnel Through the Deeps was created in 1972.
I will search through all of our resources for your answer! The fire has warmed me, through and through. Let's go through this tunnel quickly. I'm sure the boy errantly threw the ball through your window.
Yes but only if you trade with the guy in the house on route 2 an abra. You cannot reach this person until you've traveled through diglett tunnel.
Jerry swam through the tunnel so he could be like one of the boys he saw stripping