No. The informal term "kind of" is a synonym for the adverb "somewhat." So "of" here is not a preposition.
"Himself" is not any kind of preposition; it is a reflexive pronoun.
The word encounter could be followed by prepositions such as with (encounter with danger). Also the preposition of (encounter of the third kind).
No, the word "with" is no kind of conjunction. It is a preposition, and may also be used informally as an adverb.
During is not any kind of verb. It is a preposition.
It is no kind of conjunction. The word during is a preposition.
In the sentence, "Fertilizer of any kind kills carnivorous plants." "of any kind" is the prepositional phrase, "of" is the preposition, and "kind" is the object of the preposition.
In the sentence, "Fertilizer of any kind kills carnivorous plants." "of any kind" is the prepositional phrase, "of" is the preposition, and "kind" is the object of the preposition.
preposition
What kind of preposition indicates position
There are many answer
preposition
The word "with" is a preposition.
From is a preposition.
From is a preposition.
"Himself" is not any kind of preposition; it is a reflexive pronoun.
It is no kind of preposition. It is a conditional past perfect verb form.
The word "with" is a preposition.