Yes, it is one of several, also including:
across
along
away from
back to
down
into
off
onto
on to
out of
over
past
round (around)
through
to
toward (towards)
under
up
(around may also stand alone as an adverb)
It is both adverb - He arrived around five o'clock. There were several young people sitting around looking bored. preposition - The house is built around a courtyard. They drove around town.
Yes, "around" can function as a preposition in a sentence, indicating movement or location in the vicinity of something. For example, in the sentence "The cat is playing around the tree," "around" is used as a preposition indicating the location of the cat in relation to the tree.
It can be a preposition, used with an object (around the corner). Without one, it is an adverb (we looked around).
No, it is not. The word "movement" is a noun.
No, it is not a preposition. The word away is an adverb.
It is a preposition. It cannot stand alone to modify a verb.
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.
Into is a preposition. It is not a pronoun or an interjection (exclamation).
Yes, "over" is a preposition. It is used to indicate movement or position above something.
The preposition in the sentence is "down", as it shows the direction of the boy's movement.
No, "along" is a preposition or an adverb indicating movement in a line or a direction. It is not a verb.
The word around can be either an adverb or a preposition (around the clock, around the world).