No, the word 'aboard' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb and a preposition, a word that connects a noun or noun phrase to another word in the sentence.
EXAMPLES
adverb: We came aboard with a high expectations.
preposition: We were greeted graciously when we came aboard the ship.
'Excited' is the adjective. It describes the noun 'family'. The only other noun is 'train', and there is no adjective linked to it.
Aboard is an adverb and a preposition.
Large is not a preposition. It is an adjective. A preposition is a word that starts a phrase such as OF the people. Other prepositions include: in, out, aboard, about, at, as, beyond, down, up and near.
disembark
If you mean the telephone prefix for dialing another country (abroad) , then it's 00 followed by the country code in the United States. If you are asking a grammar question, "a" is the prefix for "aboard".
The collective noun 'crew' is singular, one crew. The correct verb is 'The crew prepares...'.
Yes, the word stowaway is a noun, a singular, common, compound noun; a word for someone who hides aboard a ship or other conveyance in order to obtain free passage; a word for a person.
'Excited' is the adjective. It describes the noun 'family'. The only other noun is 'train', and there is no adjective linked to it.
aboard means when your allaboard
Aboard is the correct spelling.
keep it aboard the boat when in operation.
Prepositions are words that locate where the noun/pronoun is. Some beginning with "A" are: about among at around across above amid along against aboard
Aboard is an adverb and a preposition.
The adverb aboard is used to modify a verb, to tell more about a verb; for example:"The travel bag that I carried aboard was too heavy to lift into the bin."* Aboard is an adverb when the vehicle is already known."He reached the ship and went aboard.""We ran to the bus and climbed aboard."It is a preposition when used in the sentence:We came aboard the ship together.
they came aboard on the ship to go to the island.
Aboard can be a preposition or an adverb, depending on whether it has an object or whether the object is understood. "We were invited aboard the yacht." "We decided to sleep aboard rather than go ashore."
45 where aboard on the ship.