No, it is not. Road is a noun, possibly used as a noun adjunct as in road sign.
"Along" is typically considered an adverb rather than a preposition. It can be used as a preposition in some cases, such as "along the road," where it shows relationship between the noun "road" and something else.
"between the lake and the short road" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It starts with the preposition "between" and includes the objects of the preposition, "the lake" and "the short road."
Down can be an adverb, but can also begin a prepositional phrase. Example: He jumped down. (adverb) The rabbit ran down the hole. (preposition - down into the hole) We drove down the wrong road. (preposition -We drove on the wrong road)
The noun in this sentence is "road." It is the object of the preposition "past" and the direct object of the infinitive phrase "to get."
Yes, in an example, Ex: "Why The Chicken Crossed The Road"
"Along" is typically considered an adverb rather than a preposition. It can be used as a preposition in some cases, such as "along the road," where it shows relationship between the noun "road" and something else.
The phrase "down the windy road" is a prepositional phrase, one that modifies the word traveling. The preposition is simply "down."
No, it is not a preposition. Airport is a noun that can be used as an adjunct or adjective (airport road, airport management).
"between the lake and the short road" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence. It starts with the preposition "between" and includes the objects of the preposition, "the lake" and "the short road."
Down can be an adverb, but can also begin a prepositional phrase. Example: He jumped down. (adverb) The rabbit ran down the hole. (preposition - down into the hole) We drove down the wrong road. (preposition -We drove on the wrong road)
The noun in this sentence is "road." It is the object of the preposition "past" and the direct object of the infinitive phrase "to get."
Yes, in an example, Ex: "Why The Chicken Crossed The Road"
No, it is not. Bridge can be a noun (structure, or card game) and a verb (to cross, or connect, as with a bridge).
No, a preposition is any word that shows relation of the object to any other object. For example, "I am under the table." "The ball bounced over the fence." "He drives on the road." A preposition usually indicates the temporal, spatial or logical relationship of its object to the rest of the sentence.
No, the word 'towards' (or toward) is a preposition, a word that connects a noun or a pronoun to another word in the sentence.Examples:He hit the ball and ran toward first base. (the preposition 'toward' connects the noun 'first base' with the verb 'ran')The road towards town has several gas stations. (the preposition 'towards' connects the noun 'town' to the noun 'road')
No, it is a verb. It means to verbally encourage or urge, as in "I could only exhort them to move back from the road."
Yes, at is a preposition. Whether it requires a comma depends on its position or in some cases whether it introduces a clause. He was seen driving down the road at three o'clock. (no comma) At three o'clock, he was seen driving down the road. (leading, needs comma) He tried to make a turn, at which point his car left the road. (comma)