together with, as well as.
appreciations
It's called an idiom. This means that the phrase is not to be taken literally and that it has another meaning. Since the phrase starts with "on", it's also a prepositional phrase.
They are also called contradictions.
Not letting go of the past
The missing letters in "a you a a a" could be "re" to form the phrase "are you a rat." This phrase plays on the idea of questioning someone's allegiance or behavior. Another interpretation could involve adding letters to create a different meaningful phrase, depending on context.
No. "After that" is a prepositional phrase. It is not used as a conjunction.
If you saw is not a prepositional phrase. If is a conjunction, not a preposition.
"When" is a subordinate conjunction, "it" is a pronoun, and "rains" is a verb.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a prepositional phrase used as an adjective phrase.
A conjunction connects words, for example, the word 'and' is a conjunction in the phrase 'apples and bananas'. An active describes another word, for example, the word 'red' is an adjective in the phrase 'the red ball'. This sentence has a conjunction and two adjectives: I saw a ship and a giant white whale. (Giant and white are both adjectives describing the whale.)
The phrase "does not" can be phrased several different ways. One way is making it into a conjunction of "doesn't" as well as "couldn't" or "could not."
Well, it's technically improper to place a conjunction at the start of a sentence, though this rule is often ignored in casual conversation. For example: 'And he jumped.' OR 'But he never did it.' are improper. Also, every conjunction needs a phrase on either side. For example: 'He threw a fastball and.' is incorrect. You need another phrase, or else people will end up saying 'AND WHAT???"
Conjunction
No. The phrase "in spite of" is a preposition meaning despite.
No, 'not' is not a conjunction. It is an adverb.
No. One word cannot be a phrase. A phrase is 2 or more words. While is a conjunction not a preposition.
Yes, but it can also be a conjunction when forming an adverbial phrase.