The word "wait" is never an adverb or preposition. It could be used as an interjection ("Wait!"), but in normal use, "wait" is a verb or noun.
No, it is not a preposition. Why can be an adverb, conjunction, interjection, and possibly a noun, but not a preposition.
It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb. Preposition : It is in the house. Adverb: The man came in.
"Hey" is an interjection, used to get someone's attention or express an emotion.
No. The word there is an adverb or a pronoun. It can also be described as an adjective (that person there) or a noun (went on from there) or an interjection (There! That does it.)
Neither "however" is a conjunctive adverb. It can be used as a conjunction when it joins main clauses, and it can be used as an adverb that modifies a clause.
its a conjuction
No, it is not a preposition. Why can be an adverb, conjunction, interjection, and possibly a noun, but not a preposition.
"oh" is an interjection. It is used to express emotions such as surprise, pain, or joy.
It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb. Preposition : It is in the house. Adverb: The man came in.
No. "Over" can be a preposition, an adjective, an adverb, a noun, or an interjection.
"Hey" is an interjection, used to get someone's attention or express an emotion.
No. The word there is an adverb or a pronoun. It can also be described as an adjective (that person there) or a noun (went on from there) or an interjection (There! That does it.)
interjection,verb,adjective, noun, conjunction, adverb, preposition, pronoun
Neither "however" is a conjunctive adverb. It can be used as a conjunction when it joins main clauses, and it can be used as an adverb that modifies a clause.
yes
noun, pronoun, verb, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection
either is a adverb because it answers the question ''what''