"Covered" is not a preposition. It is a past tense verb or an adjective.
"into the covered bridge" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
"Under the covered bridge" is the prepositional phrase. It provides information about the location or position of the water flow.
Under the covered bridge.
Under is the preposition. The phrase "under the bridge" is an adverb phrase.
The object of the prepositional phrase "from head to toe" is "Lance". This phrase is describing the extent to which Lance was covered with mud.
"into the covered bridge" is the prepositional phrase in the sentence.
"Under the covered bridge" is the prepositional phrase. It provides information about the location or position of the water flow.
Under the covered bridge.
Under is the preposition. The phrase "under the bridge" is an adverb phrase.
The object of the prepositional phrase "from head to toe" is "Lance". This phrase is describing the extent to which Lance was covered with mud.
From head to toe.
The prepositional phrases are 'with mud' and 'from head to toe', because there can be multiple prepositional phrases. The noun 'mud' is object of the preposition 'with'. The noun phrase 'head to toe' is the object of the preposition 'from'.
The object in the prepositional phrase is "mud." The preposition "with" indicates the relationship between the subject ("Lance") and the object ("mud").
It would be a prepositional phrase, if it made sense. For example, "to a magic elf" is a prepositional phrase, as is "to a magician," or "to a magic cauldron."
The prepositional phrase is "of art."
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."
There would be no such thing as a "fake" prepositional phrase