Generally, the last word of a prepositional phrase is the "object of the preposition."
Yes, the word "by" is a prepositional phrase. No, the word "by" is a preposition; a prepositional phrase including the word "by" would be "... by the wayside."
You are referring to the object of the preposition. In "under the sink," "sink" is the object of the preposition.
I'm not sure if your question is whether a prepositional phrase is the same thing as a word group, or if "group" is a prepositional phrase. The answer is no in either case. A word group must express a complete thought. A prepositional phrase is part of a sentence and it has to start with a preposition. "In the group" is a prepositional phrase beginning with the preposition "in."
The first word in a prepositional phrase always has to be a preposition. The last word is always a noun. For example:after the gameunder the bridgeover rainbowin the library
The noun or pronoun in a prepositional phrase is the object of a preposition.
The word that introduces a prepositional phrase is a preposition.
Yes, the word "by" is a prepositional phrase. No, the word "by" is a preposition; a prepositional phrase including the word "by" would be "... by the wayside."
You are referring to the object of the preposition. In "under the sink," "sink" is the object of the preposition.
I'm not sure if your question is whether a prepositional phrase is the same thing as a word group, or if "group" is a prepositional phrase. The answer is no in either case. A word group must express a complete thought. A prepositional phrase is part of a sentence and it has to start with a preposition. "In the group" is a prepositional phrase beginning with the preposition "in."
No. "By" is a preposition, but it is not a phrase.
No. "By" is a preposition, but it is not a phrase.
The first word in a prepositional phrase always has to be a preposition. The last word is always a noun. For example:after the gameunder the bridgeover rainbowin the library
The noun or pronoun in a prepositional phrase is the object of a preposition.
A prepositional phrase contains more than one word and is introduce by a preposition, which your is not.
No.
no its not!
No. Into is a word. It is a preposition. A phrase is more than one word, so a prepositional phrase will have more than one word eg into the woods.