No, it is not a preposition. Head can be a verb, or a noun, with an adjunct or adjective use (head honcho, head cheese).
No, a prepositional phrase typically consists of a preposition followed by a noun or pronoun (the object of the preposition) and any modifiers. The whole head would not be considered a prepositional phrase unless it is part of a larger sentence structure that includes a preposition and its object.
The prepositional phrases are 'with mud' and 'from head to toe', because there can be multiple prepositional phrases. The noun 'mud' is object of the preposition 'with'. The noun phrase 'head to toe' is the object of the preposition 'from'.
The antonym for the verb pre-position would be post-position. The part of speech "preposition" does not have an antonym.
No maybe if you payed attention in class you would know that get your head out of your fourth point of contact you hippie
No, the word 'towards' (or toward, both are accepted spellings) is not a noun.The word 'towards' (or toward) is a preposition, a word that connect a noun or a pronoun to another word in a sentence.Examples:We decided that it was time to head towardhome. (the preposition 'toward' connects the noun 'home' to the verb 'to head')The surf came rushing towards them. (the preposition 'towards' connects the pronoun 'them' to the verb 'rushing')He directs his animosity towardsothers. (the preposition 'towards' connects the noun 'others' to the noun 'animosity')
The word 'above' is both an adverb and a preposition. In the phrase 'above her head', the word is a preposition; the noun 'head' is the object of the preposition.
No, a prepositional phrase typically consists of a preposition followed by a noun or pronoun (the object of the preposition) and any modifiers. The whole head would not be considered a prepositional phrase unless it is part of a larger sentence structure that includes a preposition and its object.
The prepositional phrases are 'with mud' and 'from head to toe', because there can be multiple prepositional phrases. The noun 'mud' is object of the preposition 'with'. The noun phrase 'head to toe' is the object of the preposition 'from'.
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.
The antonym for the verb pre-position would be post-position. The part of speech "preposition" does not have an antonym.
No maybe if you payed attention in class you would know that get your head out of your fourth point of contact you hippie
No, the word 'towards' (or toward, both are accepted spellings) is not a noun.The word 'towards' (or toward) is a preposition, a word that connect a noun or a pronoun to another word in a sentence.Examples:We decided that it was time to head towardhome. (the preposition 'toward' connects the noun 'home' to the verb 'to head')The surf came rushing towards them. (the preposition 'towards' connects the pronoun 'them' to the verb 'rushing')He directs his animosity towardsothers. (the preposition 'towards' connects the noun 'others' to the noun 'animosity')
The object of the prepositional phrase "from head" would typically be the noun or pronoun that comes after the preposition "from". For example, in the sentence "The idea came from head," "head" is the object of the prepositional phrase.
Yes. In order for it to be an independent clause there would have to be a subject that is over your head.
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
curly not any thing to do with 2 or horns
A prepositional phrase is when the phrase starts with a preposition and ends with a noun or pronoun. Therefore the prepositional phrase in 'A chicken has a comb on its head?' is 'on its head'.