If the sentence is: I will go to the store immediately...then "immediately" is an adverb. It answers the "when" requirement.
"Immediately" is never a preposition.
preposition
Only is not a preposition.
No the word every is not a preposition.
what preposition goes with inspired
It is almost always used as a preposition.
immediately
It is never an adverb. It is always a preposition. The word "within" can be an adverb or a preposition, and the word "forthwith" (immediately) is an adverb.
It is never an adverb. It is always a preposition. The word "within" can be an adverb or a preposition, and the word "forthwith" (immediately) is an adverb.
The noun is placed after the preposition:Example: I was dashing to a train.train is the object of the preposition to.
No, it is not a preposition. It is a compound adverb meaning immediately.
The object of a preposition is the word or phrase that the preposition immediately refers to. For example, in the sentence: Mary hid under the table. "under" is a preposition, and "the table" is its object. The object usually comes straight after the preposition, but sometimes it appears before. Compare these two sentences: In whose name shall I book the table? Whose name shall I book the table in? In both sentences, "in" is a preposition, and "whose name" is the object of that preposition.
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
The preposition is followed by its object (and words that modify the object in the prepositional phrase).A preposition is a word that occurs before a noun/pronoun in a clause. "Preposition" means, pre - before and position - the object's location. Hence, the word that follows a preposition should be a noun or a pronoun.Some examples are as under:The book is on the table (on- preposition; table-noun)He is standing beneath the tree (beneath-preposition; tree-noun)The object of a preposition is a word or phrase that the preposition refers to.For example, in the sentence "Mary hid under the table", the word "under" is a preposition, and "the table" is its object.The object of a preposition usually comes immediately after the preposition, but it may come before it. Compare these two sentences:In whose name shall I book the table?Whose name shall I book the table in?In both sentences, the preposition is "in" and its object is "whose name" (the second form is referred to as a dangling preposition and is normally avoided).Object of a prepositionThere are five structures that can follow a preposition.NOUN PHRASE She is interested in the book.PRONOUN She is interested in it.GERUND She is interested in doing it.NOUN CLAUSE She is interested in what you said.RELATIVE CLAUSE This is the house in which she lives.** This is only true in formal English.In a sentence, a noun or pronoun typically follows a preposition.
flew is not a preposition. sorry but through is a preposition
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
A noun, a noun clause, or a pronoun must necessarily follow a preposition in a sentence, but the following is not necessarily immediate. The immediately following word is often an article or an adjective.
The noun is the object of the preposition in a prepositional phrase. Examples:He ran to school.We made more of the cupcakes.They brought fruit from the farmer's market.