English, asked by satishsoni1009, 9 months ago

Define preposition and prepositional phrase.. ​

Answers

Answered by nileshdalvi29
4

Explanation:

a word or phrase that is used before a noun or pronoun to show place, time, direction, etc.

Answered by avaniaarna
2

Answer:

a word governing, and usually preceding, a noun or pronoun and expressing a relation to another word or element in the clause, as in ‘the man on the platform’, ‘she arrived after dinner’, ‘what did you do it for?’.

In English grammar, a prepositional phrase is a group of words made up of a preposition (such as to, with, or across ), its object (a noun or pronoun), and any of the object's modifiers (an article and/or an adjective). It is only a portion of a sentence and cannot stand on its own as a complete thought.

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