This is my favorite class.
This class is my favorite.
"Before" is a preposition it can also be an adverb or adjective
The word 'through' is a preposition, an adjective, and an adverb.A preposition is a word preceding a noun or pronoun and showing a relation to another word or element, for example:The ball was thrown through the window.An adjective is a word that describes a noun, for example:There is a through flight that takes off a six.An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb, for example:My feet are wet through to my socks.
The word 'this' is an adjective, an adverb, and a demonstrative pronoun.The adjective 'this' is placed just before a noun to indicate a specific one:This cake is my favorite.The adverb 'this' modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb:I didn't expect to take this long.The demonstrative pronoun 'this' takes the place of a noun indicating near in time or place:Would you like some of this?
The word "in" is usually a preposition (within, inside), e.g. in town.Without an object, it is an adverb (come in, settled in).The only common uses as adjective are to mean modern or fashionable (e.g. the in crowd) or exclusive (an inside or in joke, an in reference).
The word 'among' is a preposition, a word that connects a noun, pronoun or noun phrase to another element in the sentence to show an element of time, location, purpose, etc. For example:You are the best among the rest! (the rest is the object of the preposition)carpet and furneture
No, the word "no" is a adjective, or more rarely an adverb, or a noun. It cannot be a preposition.
possess 'into' is a preposition
No, "inside" is not a preposition. It is an adverb or can also be used as an adjective or noun.
'Out' can actually be an adjective, an adverb, a noun, a preposition or a verb.
'Out' can actually be an adjective, an adverb, a noun, a preposition or a verb.
The word 'above' is both an adverb and a preposition. In the phrase 'above her head', the word is a preposition; the noun 'head' is the object of the preposition.
No. The word there is an adverb or a pronoun. It can also be described as an adjective (that person there) or a noun (went on from there) or an interjection (There! That does it.)
It can be either. If it has a noun as its object, it is a preposition. Standing alone, it is an adverb (and possibly an adjective). It can also be a conjunction.
The word "off" can be an adverb, preposition, adjective, noun, or verb, depending on the context.
No, the word 'in' is a preposition, an adverb, and an adjective.The word 'in' is a preposition when followed by a noun.The word 'in' is an adverb when not followed by a noun.The word 'in' is an adjective when describing a noun as 'current' or 'fashionable', and as being inside or within.Examples:I put the car in the garage. (preposition)She went in to pick up her dry cleaning. (adverb)We have to go, its the in thing to do, (adjective)A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.The nouns in the example sentences are:cargaragedry cleaningthing
It is used as a conjunction or preposition.
No, it cannot. Last can be a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb.