No, Its Not A Preprosition.
No. Maintained is the past tense and past participle of a verb (to maintain). It cannot be a preposition.
No, it is a verb form, or an adjective. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to keep" and may be used as an adjective.
The term 'to the ground' is a prepositional phrase; the noun 'ground' is the object of the preposition 'to'.The preposition relates the object of the preposition (ground) to another word in the sentence.Examples:The cellphone fell to the ground. (the preposition 'to' relates the verb 'fell' to the noun 'ground')I keep my ear to the ground. (the preposition 'to' relates the noun 'ear' to the noun 'ground')
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
At is a preposition. Anything that can be ___ the box is a preposition. For Example: At the box.
No. Maintained is the past tense and past participle of a verb (to maintain). It cannot be a preposition.
No, it is a verb form, or an adjective. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to keep" and may be used as an adjective.
The term 'to the ground' is a prepositional phrase; the noun 'ground' is the object of the preposition 'to'.The preposition relates the object of the preposition (ground) to another word in the sentence.Examples:The cellphone fell to the ground. (the preposition 'to' relates the verb 'fell' to the noun 'ground')I keep my ear to the ground. (the preposition 'to' relates the noun 'ear' to the noun 'ground')
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
She held the leash firmly to keep her dog from chasing the birds.
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.
its a preposition
At is a preposition. Anything that can be ___ the box is a preposition. For Example: At the box.
If is not a preposition. It is a conjunction.
If a preposition does not have an object, it is not a preposition. It is an adjective, adverb, or possibly a conjunction.
The preposition, the object of the preposition, and everything in between. The object of the preposition answers the question "(preposition) what?" For example: He looked in the box worriedly. "in the box" is the prepositional phrase because "in" is the preposition, and "box" is the object of the preposition. "Box" answers the question, "(preposition) what?, or in this case, "In what?"