It can be a preposition or more rarely an adverb.
Preposition : It is in the house.
Adverb: The man came in.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb, adjective, or preposition, and more rarely a noun or an interjection.
No, it is not a preposition. Why can be an adverb, conjunction, interjection, and possibly a noun, but not a preposition.
"Hey" is an interjection, used to get someone's attention or express an emotion.
The word YET is a coordinating conjunction, or an adverb. It is not a preposition or interjection (except that you could say any word by itself as an utterance).
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.
its a conjuction
No, it is not a conjunction. It is an adverb, adjective, or preposition, and more rarely a noun or an interjection.
"oh" is an interjection. It is used to express emotions such as surprise, pain, or joy.
No, it is not a preposition. Why can be an adverb, conjunction, interjection, and possibly a noun, but not a preposition.
interjection,verb,adjective, noun, conjunction, adverb, preposition, pronoun
noun, pronoun, verb, adverb, preposition, conjunction, interjection
"Hey" is an interjection, used to get someone's attention or express an emotion.
NIPPAVAC is an acronym for noun, interjection, preposition, pronoun, adjective, verb, adverb, and conjunction, which are the eight parts of speech.
Verb, noun, adjective, adverb, pronoun, preposition, conjunction, interjection.
Speech can be categorized into 8 parts namely preposition, adjective, adverb, verb, pronoun, noun, interjection and conjunction. Grammatical reference and meaning is determined with the help of this classification.
either is a adverb because it answers the question ''what''
Noun, Pronoun, Adjective, Conjunction, Interjection, Preposition, Verb, Adverb.