Whenever you say something is moving to somewhere.
e.g. I go to the shops.
The exceptions are if you are saying the command "Go!" or if you mean go as in leave.
e.g. I go from the house
The preposition "with" follows the use of the verb "concur." For example, "I concur with your opinion."
he = personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;is = verb to be;still = adverb, modifies the verb 'is';in = preposition;college = noun, object of the preposition.
"Go off" is not a verb. "Go" is a verb, but "off" is a preposition. However, "go" is an action verb.
Where did he go to college? (He did go where to college?)Where - adverb, modifies the verb 'did go';did - auxiliary verb;he - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;go - main verb;to - preposition;college - noun, object of the preposition 'to'.
When did he go to college? (He did go to college when)when - adverb, modifies the verb 'did go';did - auxiliary verb;he - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;go - main verb;to - preposition;college - noun, object of the preposition 'to'.
GO is a verb, BY is a preposition or an adverb.
Hide is a verb. (action word)
Certainly! "Can you answer to my question?"
The word "do" cannot be a preposition. It is a verb or helping verb.
A phrasal verb occurs where a verb, a particle and/or preposition occur to form a single semantic unit. Examples include "dressing down" someone (verb + particle) and "looking after" (verb + preposition).
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.