The preposition commonly used with "excited" is "about." For example, you would say, "I am excited about the upcoming event." In some contexts, you may also see "excited for," particularly when referring to a specific person or thing, such as "I am excited for you."
A preposition is one of those little words that you use to start off a phrase, like to, for, by, when, before and so on.
No, excited is a verb (excite, excites, excited, exciting), the 'action' word in a sentence.Excited can also be an adjective. Example use: The excited child ran to greet her father.The noun form is exicitedness. The pronoun that is used for excitedness is 'it'. Example use: Her excitedness showed on her face and it caused her to dance around the room.
preposition
Only is not a preposition.
No. You can be excited about, or excited at, but not excited in. For example, you are excited about the opportunity of joining....
No, "excited" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes a person's emotional state. Prepositions are words like "in," "on," and "between" that show the relationship between nouns, pronouns, or phrases to other words in a sentence.
joy
You use a preposition in a prepositional phrase, such as "I will be with you in a minute."
You can use the preposition "with" with the verb "disagree." For example, "I disagree with your opinion."
use the preposition
Yes, you can use the word but as a preposition. It is a preposition the same as about, by, for, and than.
When can you use than as a preposition rather than a conjunction?
I was very excited when I got a puppy for Christmas.
I was very excited when I got a puppy for Christmas.
no
At is a preposition. And is a conjunction.
no