The object will be a plural noun, or a collective noun (e.g. among friends, among the crowd, among his peers).
Yes, it is. It is a form of the preposition "among" meaning "in the midst of."
It can be either, depending on whether it has an object. "He climbed up the mountain" (preposition, object mountain) "He entered the elevator and went up" (adverb, no object).
A preposition will use an object (noun, pronoun, or an equivalent phrase). Example: Getting dirty is part of being a cowboy. (being a cowboy is a noun phrase, object of the preposition of) Where an adverb might also be used as a preposition, look for an object: a noun or pronoun or the equivalent which normally follows the preposition. If there is none, the word in that usage is an adverb. Example: We walked on. (adverb) We walked on the beach. (preposition)
No. The word from is a preposition. However, with a noun object, it can form an adverbial phrase.
The word with is not an adverb; it is a preposition. The word "without" may be an adverb (e.g. to do without, where no specific object is used).
The object of the preposition "among" is "the stacks and on the shelves." The preposition "among" shows the relationship between the subject "she" and the location where she searched, which includes both the stacks and the shelves.
The object will be a plural noun, or a collective noun (e.g. among friends, among the crowd, among his peers).
It certainly can be. It depends on the sentence.Examples:I gave it to you. ["to" is a preposition; "you" is its object]After you. "After" = preposition; "you" = its object]
it can be. an object of a preposition is the noun in a prepositional phrase. one example where week is the object of a preposition is "that's your best grade of the week"
The object of the preposition is gift. The preposition is "with."
The object of the preposition is the noun that follows the preposition, the word that the preposition relates to another word in the sentence. It can also be a pronoun, gerund, infinitive, or noun phrase. Examples: The car is in the garage. (in is the preposition, and garage is the object of the preposition.) We went to the grocery store for milk. (the grocery store is the first object of a preposition; milk is the second object of a preposition.)
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.The word 'among' is a preposition, a word that connects a noun or a pronoun to another word in a sentence.Example: There was one rose among the thorns. (the preposition 'among' connects the noun 'rose' to the object of the preposition 'thorns', a noun)
The object of the preposition 'for' is lunch.
Yes, the word among is a preposition.
The pronoun 'us' is functioning as the object of the preposition 'among'.
There is no object of the preposition in this sentence because there is no preposition.Joe sliced an apple on the table.In this sentence the table is the object of the preposition on.
A prepositional phrase includes a preposition, its object (noun or pronoun), and any modifiers. The object of the preposition is the noun or pronoun that follows the preposition and is part of the prepositional phrase. It shows the relationship between the object and the rest of the sentence.