No, it is not a preposition. Appears is a form of the verb appear.
The antonym for the verb pre-position would be post-position. The part of speech "preposition" does not have an antonym.
In the sentence, "There is not likely to be rain except in Scotland," there appears to be two prepositions following each other: 'except' and 'in.' I am assuming 'except in' can function as a discrete preposition because I don't think you can put two prepositions in a row.
The object of a preposition is the word or phrase that the preposition immediately refers to. For example, in the sentence: Mary hid under the table. "under" is a preposition, and "the table" is its object. The object usually comes straight after the preposition, but sometimes it appears before. Compare these two sentences: In whose name shall I book the table? Whose name shall I book the table in? In both sentences, "in" is a preposition, and "whose name" is the object of that preposition.
It will almost always be an adverb phrase, followed by a comma. e.g. "In the spring, birds fly south." It can, rarely, be an adjective. e.g. Of (among) the survivors, most were badly injured.
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
In the King James version, the word - Lord - appears 7,830 times The only words which occur more often are the word - a - appears 8177 times (indefinite article) the word - his - appears 8473 times (possessive adjective) the word - I - appears 8854 times (personal pronoun) the word - for - appears 8971 times (preposition) the word - unto - appears 8997 times (preposition) the word - shall - appears 9838 times (verb) the word - he - appears 10420 times (personal pronoun) the word - In - appears 12667 times (preposition) the word - that - appears 12913 times (pronoun) the word - to - appears 13562 times (preposition) the word - of - appears 34617 times (preposition) the word - and - appears 51696 times (conjunction) the word - the - appears 63924 times (definite article)
The antonym for the verb pre-position would be post-position. The part of speech "preposition" does not have an antonym.
In the sentence, "There is not likely to be rain except in Scotland," there appears to be two prepositions following each other: 'except' and 'in.' I am assuming 'except in' can function as a discrete preposition because I don't think you can put two prepositions in a row.
The object of a preposition is the word or phrase that the preposition immediately refers to. For example, in the sentence: Mary hid under the table. "under" is a preposition, and "the table" is its object. The object usually comes straight after the preposition, but sometimes it appears before. Compare these two sentences: In whose name shall I book the table? Whose name shall I book the table in? In both sentences, "in" is a preposition, and "whose name" is the object of that preposition.
It will almost always be an adverb phrase, followed by a comma. e.g. "In the spring, birds fly south." It can, rarely, be an adjective. e.g. Of (among) the survivors, most were badly injured.
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
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.