No, it is not a preposition. Jumped is a past tense verb, and possibly an adjective.
In the sentence "Two dogs jumped after two boys," the object of the preposition is "boys." The preposition "after" shows the relationship between the action (jumped) and the noun phrase "two boys."
No. Down is an adverb, and from is the preposition. He jumped (down) from the fence.
Some examples of objects of a preposition are: "She sat on the chair." - "Chair" is the object of the preposition "on." "The cat jumped over the fence." - "Fence" is the object of the preposition "over." "I put the keys in the drawer." - "Drawer" is the object of the preposition "in."
You will find a mailbox across the street.
"Off" is an adverb. But it can be considered a preposition in some cases.HoweverIn a case like "She fell off the bed", the preposition ofis understood, completing the actual prepositional phrase "(of) the bed". "Off" remains purely an adverb modifying the verb "fell", telling where she fell.
Towards is the preposition.
In the sentence "Two dogs jumped after two boys," the object of the preposition is "boys." The preposition "after" shows the relationship between the action (jumped) and the noun phrase "two boys."
Over.
No. A verb is something you do i.e. I jumped. Where jumped is the verb. A preposition links nouns pronouns and phrases to the sentence i.e. I jumped on the table. "On" would be the preposition. Something to help you with prepositions is saying the sentence. The squirrel went ______ the tree. You can use beneath, around, above, etc. and all would be a preposition.
The preposition is "over" and the phrase "over the tree" is an adverbial phrase telling where the rabbit jumped. (unless the tree has fallen to the ground, that is quite a leap)
It can be, used as a noun. For example: He sat on the bed - bed is the object of the preposition "on."
joy
No, it's usually an adjective (when modifying a noun, as in "I earned a high B.") or an adverb (when modifying a verb, as in "I jumped high.").No, high is not a preposition.
No. Down is an adverb, and from is the preposition. He jumped (down) from the fence.
Some examples of objects of a preposition are: "She sat on the chair." - "Chair" is the object of the preposition "on." "The cat jumped over the fence." - "Fence" is the object of the preposition "over." "I put the keys in the drawer." - "Drawer" is the object of the preposition "in."
You will find a mailbox across the street.
When up is used as an adverb, it isn't followed by a noun.Dave jumped up. (adverb)Dave walked up the stairs. (preposition)