No, it is not. Bridge can be a noun (structure, or card game) and a verb (to cross, or connect, as with a bridge).
The word "beyond" is the preposition in the sentence "Go beyond the bridge." It shows the relationship between the verb "go" and the noun "bridge," indicating direction in this case.
Under is the preposition. The phrase "under the bridge" is an adverb phrase.
Under is a preposition. It depends on the object of the preposition as to what it is under. Under the bridge, under the water or misunderstood.It can rarely be an adverb without an object, e.g. The poor swimmer kept going under.
Yes, as in "We walked underneath the bridge." If it is not followed by an object, it is an adverb.
A phrase is two or three words.A preposition is a single word like on / up / over / throughA prepositional phrase is a phrase (two or three or more words) with a preposition = on the table / through the gate / over the bridge
Go beyond the bridge
underneath preposition
Go beyond the bridge
The word "beyond" is the preposition in the sentence "Go beyond the bridge." It shows the relationship between the verb "go" and the noun "bridge," indicating direction in this case.
No, it is not. It is an adverb or a preposition (used with an object, e.g, underneath the bridge).
No
Under is the preposition. The phrase "under the bridge" is an adverb phrase.
"At that time" is the prepositional phrase.
in Washington. "In" is a preposition and thus "in Washington" is the prepositional phrase.
Prepositions are words that represent where something is in relation to something else. Think of standing on a bridge...anything describing where something is in relation to the bridge is a preposition. On, under, beside, near, etc. In this example "over" is the preposition. The prepositional phrase continues until you get to a noun (subject), so in the example above "over your head" is the prepositional phrase.
No, the word 'over' is a preposition, an adverb, and an adjective, not a noun.Examples:We drove over the bridge. (preposition)The soup boiled over. (adverb)I spoke to the manager about the over billing. (adjective)
Under is a preposition. It depends on the object of the preposition as to what it is under. Under the bridge, under the water or misunderstood.It can rarely be an adverb without an object, e.g. The poor swimmer kept going under.