If you mean "Can you use pronouns as prepositions?" the answer is "no". They are completely different parts of speech, and not interchangeable.
Nouns, pronouns, and gerunds usually come after prepositions in a sentence.
No, pronouns and prepositions serve different grammatical functions in a sentence. Pronouns usually replace nouns, while prepositions show the relationship between nouns, pronouns, and other words in a sentence.
Pronouns in the objective case can function as direct objects, indirect objects, and objects of prepositions in a sentence.
In English, the pronoun cases are subjective, objective, an possessive. Subjective pronouns are used only for the subject of a sentences or phrase. Some subjective pronouns are I, we, he, she, and they. Objective pronouns are pronouns that are used only for the object of a sentence or phrase. Some objective pronouns are me, us, him, her, and them. Some pronouns can be used as the subject or the object of a sentence or phrase. Those pronouns are you and it. Possessive pronouns show that something in the sentence belongs to it. Possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs, and everybody's thanks visit me or add me pinkgrape1@live.com
Prepositions relate nouns and pronouns to other words in a sentence. They show the relationship between the noun or pronoun and another word in the sentence, such as location, direction, time, or possession. Some common prepositions include "in," "on," "at," and "with."
He, she, and it are pronouns, not prepositions.
Nouns, pronouns, and gerunds usually come after prepositions in a sentence.
Prepositions are words we use before pronouns or nouns to show their relationship with other words in the sentence.
Pronouns that start with Y are:personal pronoun, youpossessive pronoun, yourspossessive adjective, yourreflexive pronouns, yourself, yourselves
Either nouns or pronouns follow prepositions: * John gave the envelope to me. * John gave the envelope to the guide. * Mary placed the book on the shelf behind you.
No, pronouns and prepositions serve different grammatical functions in a sentence. Pronouns usually replace nouns, while prepositions show the relationship between nouns, pronouns, and other words in a sentence.
prepositions are used before nouns and pronouns
Some pronouns that begin with "h" include her, him, and he.
Pronouns in the objective case can function as direct objects, indirect objects, and objects of prepositions in a sentence.
In English, the pronoun cases are subjective, objective, an possessive. Subjective pronouns are used only for the subject of a sentences or phrase. Some subjective pronouns are I, we, he, she, and they. Objective pronouns are pronouns that are used only for the object of a sentence or phrase. Some objective pronouns are me, us, him, her, and them. Some pronouns can be used as the subject or the object of a sentence or phrase. Those pronouns are you and it. Possessive pronouns show that something in the sentence belongs to it. Possessive pronouns are mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs, and everybody's thanks visit me or add me pinkgrape1@live.com
nouns, adjectives, pronouns, verbs, adverbs, conjunctions, prepositions, and interjections
Prepositions relate nouns and pronouns to other words in a sentence. They show the relationship between the noun or pronoun and another word in the sentence, such as location, direction, time, or possession. Some common prepositions include "in," "on," "at," and "with."