No. However is an adverb or a conjunction. It cannot be a preposition.
No, the word "however" is not a preposition. Instead, it is an adverb that is used to show contrasts or introduce a counterpoint in a sentence.
No, due is an adjective. However, there is a compound preposition "due to" (meaning because, or as a result of).
Of is a preposition. There is no way that "of" could modify anything. However, it was historically the basis for the adverb off.
The word "a" is never used as a preposition. It may be used as part of a prepositional phrase. However, the word "at" is a preposition, indicating location or time.
Not together. The word "of" can be used as a preposition. However, the idiomatic construction "of course" is a compound adverb meaning "certainly" or definitely.
No, the word "however" is not a preposition. Instead, it is an adverb that is used to show contrasts or introduce a counterpoint in a sentence.
No. The word from is a preposition. However, with a noun object, it can form an adverbial phrase.
No, due is an adjective. However, there is a compound preposition "due to" (meaning because, or as a result of).
Of is a preposition. There is no way that "of" could modify anything. However, it was historically the basis for the adverb off.
The word "a" is never used as a preposition. It may be used as part of a prepositional phrase. However, the word "at" is a preposition, indicating location or time.
No. Above and beside are separate adverbs or prepositions. However, the term "above and beyond" can be a combined preposition, and usually modifies nouns.
"Mid" is usually a prefix, not a word unto itself. However, "amid" is a preposition. For example, "Amid the chaos, the hero remained calm."
Not together. The word "of" can be used as a preposition. However, the idiomatic construction "of course" is a compound adverb meaning "certainly" or definitely.
Neither "however" is a conjunctive adverb. It can be used as a conjunction when it joins main clauses, and it can be used as an adverb that modifies a clause.
A verb cannot be a preposition. However, an infinitive (such as "to visit") can form an infinitive phrase (such as "to visit the bank"), just as a preposition forms a prepositional phrase (such as "to the bank").
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
The preposition is fine. However, the question technically should read: Does this sentence use a preposition properly? Connor waited in line while Ava parked the car.