Examples of pronouns = her , his , their
Examples of prepositions = behind , over, through
Examples of conjuctions = but , and , because
Who is a pronoun or a conjunction for restrictive clauses. It is not a preposition.
No, "so that" is a compound conjunction. It means "in order that."
No. The word neither is an adjective, a pronoun, or a conjunction (neither/nor is a correlative conjunction).
No. It is a pronoun, adjective, adverb, or a conjunction when used as "either...or."
"Under" is a preposition, not a conjunction. It is used to show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another element in the sentence.
Who is a pronoun or a conjunction for restrictive clauses. It is not a preposition.
The word 'or' is not a pronoun; or is a conjunction, a preposition, or a noun.
The word "Of" is a Preposition.
No, "so that" is a compound conjunction. It means "in order that."
No, it is not a verb. As is an adverb, preposition, and conjunction, and possibly a pronoun.
No. It is a pronoun or conjunction. It introduces clauses, not prepositional phrases.
No it is not. The word "that" can be a conjunction, determiner, pronoun or adverb.
No. The word neither is an adjective, a pronoun, or a conjunction (neither/nor is a correlative conjunction).
No. It is a pronoun, adjective, adverb, or a conjunction when used as "either...or."
"Under" is a preposition, not a conjunction. It is used to show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another element in the sentence.
Lord is a pronoun.
"for" can function as both a preposition and a conjunction. As a preposition, it shows a relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. As a conjunction, it connects words, phrases, or clauses.