certain is not a preposition
No. Certain is an adjective (particular, or for sure), and rarely a pronoun. But it cannot be a preposition.
It certainly can be. It depends on the sentence.Examples:I gave it to you. ["to" is a preposition; "you" is its object]After you. "After" = preposition; "you" = its object]
No. Seemed is the past tense of the verb "to seem." It is not a preposition.
It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb. Preposition : It is in the house. Adverb: The man came in.
yes it is and i think you mean preposition!
No. Certain is an adjective (particular, or for sure), and rarely a pronoun. But it cannot be a preposition.
It certainly can be. It depends on the sentence.Examples:I gave it to you. ["to" is a preposition; "you" is its object]After you. "After" = preposition; "you" = its object]
No. Seemed is the past tense of the verb "to seem." It is not a preposition.
It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb. Preposition : It is in the house. Adverb: The man came in.
yes it is and i think you mean preposition!
The preposition "against" is typically used after the word "prejudice." For example, one might say "prejudice against a certain group of people."
The preposition for "insist" is generally "on". For example, one might insist on a particular course of action or insist on having something done a certain way.
I'm about 90% certain it is an adverb. About can serve as an adverb, preposition or adjective. I'm 99.9999999999999% certain it isn't an adjective as used here, but preposition or adverb depends on whether there is anything more to the sentence: He wandered about (aimlessly) => about is an adverb He wandered about the park => about is a preposition
"Past" can be used as a preposition to indicate movement or location beyond a certain point in time or space. For example, "He walked past the store" or "The car sped past the intersection."
No, the word sometimes is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb as done occasionally. Example:I sometimes see John at the cafe.
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
The word "into" is a preposition. Prepositions are words that typically show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. "Into" specifically indicates movement towards the inside or interior of something. It is important to note that prepositions can also function as adverbs in certain contexts.