Yes.
Example sentence:
She went to the store for milk and cereal.
(Milk and cereal are both objects.)
A preposition is one word, a word that begins a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase contains more than one word.
it can be. an object of a preposition is the noun in a prepositional phrase. one example where week is the object of a preposition is "that's your best grade of the week"
The word "is" is not an object of a preposition because it is a verb. Objects of a preposition are typically nouns or pronouns that receive the action of the preposition.
Yes, a preposition can have multiple objects if they are connected by conjunctions such as "and" or "or." For example, in the sentence "I bought a book for Sam and Sarah," the preposition "for" has two objects, "Sam" and "Sarah."
"Which one" is not a preposition. A preposition is a part of speech which introduces a related object, for example "over the table," "in the barn," "beside the station," "during class." "Which one" does not take an object. Syntactically, it is a combination of a noun ("one") with an interrogative adjective ("which"). "Which one" could be an object of a preposition (e.g. "On which one did you bestow the gift") but not a preposition.
A preposition is one word, a word that begins a prepositional phrase. A prepositional phrase contains more than one word.
it can be. an object of a preposition is the noun in a prepositional phrase. one example where week is the object of a preposition is "that's your best grade of the week"
The word "is" is not an object of a preposition because it is a verb. Objects of a preposition are typically nouns or pronouns that receive the action of the preposition.
Yes, a preposition can have multiple objects if they are connected by conjunctions such as "and" or "or." For example, in the sentence "I bought a book for Sam and Sarah," the preposition "for" has two objects, "Sam" and "Sarah."
"Which one" is not a preposition. A preposition is a part of speech which introduces a related object, for example "over the table," "in the barn," "beside the station," "during class." "Which one" does not take an object. Syntactically, it is a combination of a noun ("one") with an interrogative adjective ("which"). "Which one" could be an object of a preposition (e.g. "On which one did you bestow the gift") but not a preposition.
In the sentence "Which one of the following words represents an object of a preposition?", "Of the following words" and "Of a preposition" are prepositions. The object of a prepositon in each would be "words" and "prepositions".
In the above sentence 'books' functions as the object of a preposition [D].The preposition is [of], though it would be more accurate to say that 'books' is the object of the prepositional phrase [one of the finest].
An object of a preposition is the noun, pronoun, or noun phrase that follows a preposition in a sentence. For example, in the phrase "the book on the table," "table" is the object of the preposition "on."
A phrasal preposition consists of more than one word, like 'in front of', 'on behalf of'. A prepositional phrase is a preposition (simple or phrasal) + noun phrase object: 'on the desk', 'in front of the fireplace'.
A clause used as the object of a preposition is called a noun clause. A noun clause takes the role of a noun. In the sentence, "I do not know anything except what I saw last night. " The preposition is "except" and its object is the noun clause "what I saw last night".
One is not "more correct" than the other: to you and meis correct, and to you and I is barbarously wrong.
No. Phrases must contain more than one word, and prepositional phrase are introduced by a preposition. Used is not a preposition.