No, it is not a preposition. "Away" is an adverb or an adjective.
The opposite directional preposition is from.
motel:Inn preposition
Yes, it is. It is a form of the preposition "among" meaning "in the midst of."
what preposition should follow the word genius ?!!
No. Nine can be a noun (a number), pronoun, or adjective. But it cannot be a preposition.
No, it is not a preposition. The word away is an adverb.
No, the word AWAY is an adverb. It answers the question where. (the combined form "away from" is a preposition of movement)
Yes, "out" is a preposition when used to show movement away from a place or position. For example, in the phrase "He walked out of the room," "out" indicates the direction of movement away from the room.
The preposition is "of." It connects the object (rattles) with the noun sound.
Sure thing, honey. The preposition in this sentence is "away." It shows the relationship between the bird and the window. Now go fly away and use that preposition in your own sassy sentences!
No. Distant is an adjective meaning far-away.
No, it is not. The word dispose is a verb (to get rid of, throw away).
There is no missing preposition. The adverb "away" would normally follow the verb take.
Deposition- which means like taking away or the removal of something
The words are not a combined form. The word "away" is an adverb, and the word from (a preposition) would introduce a noun (the object) indicating what something was to be away from.
The word "of" (uv) is a preposition, connecting its object to another noun or more rarely a verb.The similar word "off" (not on, away from) can be a preposition or an adverb.
Yes. There is nothing wrong with it. "Away" is not a preposition in this case, but a separable part of a verb. In verbs such as put away or set up or pave over, the direct object often goes between the verb stem and the "proposition." Thus we say I put them away, You set him up, They paved it over. Furthermore, the prohibition against ending a sentence with a preposition is part of Latin grammar. It does not apply to English, and it is nothing more than a learnèd error to claim that it does. Normally, you should not end a sentence with a preposition ("away" is a preposition, just like "to," "of," "for," "from," "by," "with," "at," etc.). So the sentence should be "Who is going to put away these clothes?"