No, "caught" is not a preposition. It is a past participle of the verb "catch." Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
The word 'in' is a preposition, a word that connects the object of the preposition (nets and traps) to the verb 'caught'.
No, it is not a preposition. It is a past tense verb (to trap) and can be used as an adjective.
It can be, when it forms a phrase that modifies words such as all, none, or last, and means "except for."Example: They caught all of the prisoners except one.(modifies all)
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.
The word 'in' is a preposition, a word that connects the object of the preposition (nets and traps) to the verb 'caught'.
caught = a verb - the past of catch in = a preposition nets = a noun - the plural of net
No, it is not a preposition. It is a past tense verb (to trap) and can be used as an adjective.
Thousands - noun of - preposition years - noun ago - adverb fish - noun were - verb (auxiliary) caught - verb (past participle) in - preposition nets - noun and - conjunction traps - noun
It can be, when it forms a phrase that modifies words such as all, none, or last, and means "except for."Example: They caught all of the prisoners except one.(modifies all)
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
Example: "She was caught running with scissors."The preposition, with, is an objective preposition.Why?Because the verb running has an object, with scissors. The object of a verb is something the verb acts on, or points to. The preposition with is part of the object in the above example.Another example: "They took turns stepping in puddles on the way home."In this example, in is the objective preposition, because it links puddles with the verb stepping. Where did they step? They stepped in puddles.
The two words 'and traps' are a (a) conjunction (and) and a plural noun (traps).The conjunction 'and' joins the compound object of the preposition 'in' (nets and traps).
"and" is a conjunction. A conjunction links a word or a group of words to other words in a sentence. For example: "I was eating a hamburger and drinking a Coke.' "and" connects "I was eating a hamburger" with "drinking a Coke.' Other conjunctions are for, nor, but, or, yet, and so.
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