Usually the word "to" comes after "emailed."
The preposition "into" or "to" comes after the verb "turn." For example, "turn into a frog" or "turn to the right."
of with by at from
The preposition "for" typically comes after the verb "register." For example, "She registered for the class."
The preposition "for" typically comes after the verb "support." Example: "I support the plan for improving public transportation."
In grammar, a noun, pronoun, or gerund typically comes before a preposition. These words help establish the relationship between the preposition and the rest of the sentence.
prepositions are used before nouns and pronouns
"Before" can serve as both a preposition and an adverb. When it comes before a verb, it usually functions as a preposition, indicating the time, place, or motion of the action expressed by the verb.
Healthy - adjective food - noun comes - verb (intransitive verb) from - preposition a - article garden - noun
The word "do" cannot be a preposition. It is a verb or helping verb.
No, it is not a preposition. The word has is a form of "to have" -- a verb or auxiliary verb.
No, "get" is a verb. It can be used as a noun in some cases, but it is not a preposition.
The verb update is not necessarily followed by a preposition. Which preposition comes after the verb update (when applicable) depends on the context of using the word; for example:We can update the figures tomorrow.We should update the report to the committee.We will update the figures when we have the information.We will update the report from the minutes of the meeting.They did update the information for model X.They can update the next issue of the newsletter.I should update that memo.