The preposition in the phrase "What is the name of this street?" is "of." It indicates a relationship between "name" and "this street," showing possession or association. This structure is commonly used to inquire about the designation or title of a specific location.
The name of this street is Main Street. The preposition in the sentence is "of".
In the sentence "What's the name of this street," the preposition is "of." It shows a relationship between "the name" and "this street," indicating possession or association.
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Yes. On is the preposition; Maple Street is the object of the preposition.
The preposition in the sentence is "out." It shows the movement from inside the restaurant to the busy street.
The nouns in the sentence are:Gina, proper noun, the name of a person (subject of the sentence);street, common noun, a word for a thing (object of the preposition 'along')The other words are:walked, verb, past tense, intransitive (it has no object);along, preposition;the, article;crowded, adjective, modifies the noun 'street'.
No, it is not a preposition. It is not even a clear phrase. "The work" is a noun and "runs" can be a verb or a plural noun.It would only be used with work in a colloquial construction such as "the work runs from January to March" or "the work (street work) runs from First Street to Second Street."* "The word runs" is not a preposition. It is a verb.
In order to succeed, one must work hard. The preposition in this sentence is "to."
No, it is not a preposition. It is a proper noun, the name of a place.
The object of a preposition is the word or phrase that the preposition immediately refers to. For example, in the sentence: Mary hid under the table. "under" is a preposition, and "the table" is its object. The object usually comes straight after the preposition, but sometimes it appears before. Compare these two sentences: In whose name shall I book the table? Whose name shall I book the table in? In both sentences, "in" is a preposition, and "whose name" is the object of that preposition.