The missing word is the preposition on.
No, it is not used as a preposition. It is usually an adjective (missing, not present), but more rarely as a verb (e.g. to absent oneself).
for
You need to rephrase the sentence. You are missing the object of the preposition "of".
There is no missing preposition. The adverb "away" would normally follow the verb take.
subject predicate noun direct object indirect object apposotive (appositvie?) direct address object of preposition Ok --which one am I missing?
On the rooftops above Balding Avenue, in a greenhouse.To get to the Third SpyOn Balding Avenue, use your grapple bowtie to go up the building to the right of the Grease Monkey garage. At the top, you can enter the "Rooftops". From there, you put on your Chameleon Suit and grapple left to the next building, which is guarded and has lasers to keep you from going up. Instead, go farther left to the red building, and climb that one. At the top, you can grapple right to get to the tower. (A friendly spy suggests this.) Enter the tube to rescue the third spy from the Greenhouse.(see related question)
The word above is usually an adverb or preposition. But it can be considered a noun when used to mean a preceding item, as in "refer to the above" -- but here there is actually a missing word (e.g. section) for which above is an adjective.
They have a fair economical condition, or they have a hard economical condition. It's missing an adjective for the noun 'economical.' When "economical" is used as a preposition it is correct to say : They have an economical condition, with the meaning of profitable.
No, the word 'behind' is not a noun.The word 'behind' is a preposition and an adverb.The preposition 'behind' connects a noun or a pronoun to another word in the sentence. Example:We finally found the missing kitten behind the barn. (the preposition connects the noun 'barn' to the verb 'found')The adverb 'behind' modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Example:Behind every success is a lot of hard work. (the adverb modifies the adjective 'every')The word 'behind' is an informal noun (slang), a common noun, a general word for buttocks.
Missing is an adjective, as in a missing person
salary missing
Girl, Missing Sister, missing Missing me [read them all - they are amazing]