English, asked by manish2019, 1 year ago

Complete the following using Prepositions:

a) I agree _____ you ________ this point.

b) You should not be angry _________ me for speaking _________ you.

c) You should abide ________ the rules of the schools and your school.

d) He should not be absent _________ school tomorrow.

e) Richa’s school is adjacent ________ her house.

f) You will never be excused __________ for coming late to work.

Answers

Answered by Shumailaqutsia
3
I agree with you in this point
You should not be angry on me for speaking about you
He should not be absent on school tomorrow
Richa's school is adjacent in her house
you will never be excused about for coming late to work
You should abide to the rules of the school and your school.
Answered by krishnaanandsynergy
0

Completed sentences by using Prepositions:

  • a) I agree with you on this point.
  • b) You should not be angry at me for speaking for you.
  • c) You should abide by the rules of the schools and your school.
  • d) He should not be absent from school tomorrow.
  • e) Richa’s school is adjacent to her house.
  • f) You will never be excused for coming late to work.

Prepositions:

  • To indicate direction, time, place, location, spatial relationships, or to introduce an object, a preposition is a word or set of words used before a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase.
  • Prepositions include phrases like "in," "at," "on," "of," and "to."
  • English prepositions are quite idiomatic.
  • A preposition is "pre-positioned" in front of its object.
  • Since any noun or pronoun contained in the prepositional phrase must be the preposition's object and cannot be mistakenly labeled as a verb's direct object, it is useful to locate prepositional phrases in sentences.

Rules of Prepositions:

  • The object of a preposition is required.
  • A preposition is a name for something that frequently comes before something else (its object).
  • A "prepositional object" is the noun or pronoun that comes after a preposition.
  • Prepositions don't have a specific form.
  • Do not mix the preposition "to" with the infinitive particle "to" (to sing, to live) (to London, to me).
  • A "noun" follows a preposition. A verb is NEVER used after it.

#SPJ2

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