at
by
Amazed, Astound
The man ON the platform was staring back at me. This is an example sentence for preposition.
Waited
The nouns in the sentence are:jar, subject of the sentencepickles, object of the preposition 'of'tile floor (compound noun), object of the preposition 'on'kitchen, object of the preposition 'in'
An object of the preposition is a noun that ends the prepositional phrase as in the following sentence: She looked at the nurse. The prepositional phrase is "at the nurse." The preposition is "at" and the objective if the preposition is "nurse." A predicate nominative follows a linking verb and renames the subject as in the following sentence: My sister is a nurse. The linking verb is "is" and the predicate nominative is "nurse" which renames the subject "sister."
You use a preposition in a prepositional phrase, such as "I will be with you in a minute."
amazed can be best used as such. I was amazed to see you.
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?
no
At is a preposition. And is a conjunction.
after noun
no
Adverb: I had a hat on. Preposition: I didn't have any money on me.
The preposition "with" follows the use of the verb "concur." For example, "I concur with your opinion."