The preposition "without" can be the opposite of "with" as in the examples: He went with his brother/He went without his brother.
The opposite of "with" as a preposition is "without."
It can be, if used with another noun to indicate location. "The bakery is opposite the bank." "The dog sat opposite the cat." Otherwise it will be a noun (the reverse) or an adjective (opposing, contradictory).
Yes, "across" is a preposition. It is used to show the position of something on the opposite side of a specific reference point.
There is one for the adjective preposition "for" (meaning in favor) -- you can use the word "against" which also has a second meaning (leaning on, next to).But if "for" means "intended for a person or use" (a present for her, key for the door), then the only opposite is "not for."
"Left" is not a preposition; it is typically used as an adjective or noun to refer to the direction or side opposite to right.
No, "unable" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes someone's lack of ability or capacity to do something.
The opposite directional preposition is from.
opposite of opposite to opposite from
Out is the opposite of in and can be a preposition (out the window, out the door), but it is often an adverb, and can also be a noun.
of is a preposition. off is the opposite of on.
There is no opposite of the preposition "for" (a reason).However, for something given as a gift, the opposite of "for" (the recipient) would be from (the donor or giver).
It can be, if used with another noun to indicate location. "The bakery is opposite the bank." "The dog sat opposite the cat." Otherwise it will be a noun (the reverse) or an adjective (opposing, contradictory).
Yes, "across" is a preposition. It is used to show the position of something on the opposite side of a specific reference point.
There is one for the adjective preposition "for" (meaning in favor) -- you can use the word "against" which also has a second meaning (leaning on, next to).But if "for" means "intended for a person or use" (a present for her, key for the door), then the only opposite is "not for."
"Left" is not a preposition; it is typically used as an adjective or noun to refer to the direction or side opposite to right.
No, "unable" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes someone's lack of ability or capacity to do something.
"Always" is an adverb that typically indicates the constant or consistent nature of an action or state. It is not a preposition.
of off on on account of on behalf of on board onto on top of opposite opposite to other than out out of outside ouside of over owing to