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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.
No. It is a pronoun or conjunction. It introduces clauses, not prepositional phrases.
A prepositional phrase begins with a preposition and ends with an object of a preposition.
No. A prepositional phrase requires a preposition and a subject. (with her, to the cat, for the government, etc) Further, the word, "Or" is a conjunction, not a preposition.
A preposition begins a prepositional phrase. It connects a noun or pronoun to the rest of the sentence and shows the relationship between that noun or pronoun and another element in the sentence. Examples of prepositions include "in," "on," "at," "by," and "with."
It's a prepositional phrase.
I think a group of sub words of a conjunction sentence that links to the main clause. A prepositional phrase is the preposition (a functional word) word that links a noun and verb to form a sentence. IE: Bill will arrive AT four, He will get here ON time
No. "at" is a preposition, used to make prepositional phrases, such "at the lake', "at a baseball game", "at home".
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No, a prepositional phrase begins with a preposition and ends with a noun, pronoun, or gerund. The phrase provides additional information about the subject or object in a sentence.
No, but "in parts of three states" is a prepositional phrase, because it begins with the preposition "in."